An emergency department intervention to improve earlier detection of community-onset bloodstream infection among hospitalized patients

Am J Infect Control. 2024 Jun;52(6):664-669. doi: 10.1016/j.ajic.2024.01.003. Epub 2024 Jan 15.

Abstract

Background: Blood cultures (BCs) are essential microbiologic tests, but blood culturing diagnostic stewardship is frequently poor. We aimed to study the process-related failures and to evaluate the effect of an emergency department (ED) intervention on BCs collection practices and yield.

Methods: We implemented an ED-quality improvement intervention including educational sessions, phlebotomists addition, promoting single-site strategy for BC-collection and preanalytical data feedback. BC-bottles collected, positive BCs, blood volumes and documentation of collection times were measured, before (December 2021-August 2022) and after (September 2022-July 2023) intervention. Results were corrected to hospitalizations admissions or days. We used interrupted-time series analyses for comparisons.

Results: A total of 64,295 BC bottles were evaluated, 26,261 before and 38,034 postintervention. The median ED-BCs collected per week increased from 88 to 105 BCs (P < .0001), resulting from increased early sampling (P = .0001). Solitary BCs decreased (95%-28%), documented times increased (2.8%-25%), and average blood volume increased (3 mL to 4.5 mL) postintervention. Community-onset Bloodstream infections (BSIs) increased (39.6-52 bottles/1,000 admissions, P = .0001), while Health care-associated BSIs decreased (39-27 bottles/10,000 days, P = .0042). Contamination rates did not change.

Conclusions: An ED-focused intervention based on the education sessions and single-site strategy improved culturing stewardship and facilitated the early identification of BSI without an increase in contamination.

Keywords: Blood cultures; Diagnostic stewardship; Phlebotomist; Single-site strategy.

MeSH terms

  • Bacteremia / diagnosis
  • Blood Culture* / methods
  • Blood Culture* / standards
  • Community-Acquired Infections* / diagnosis
  • Community-Acquired Infections* / microbiology
  • Early Diagnosis
  • Emergency Service, Hospital*
  • Hospitalization
  • Humans
  • Quality Improvement
  • Sepsis / diagnosis