Background: Central Line Associated Blood Stream Infections (CLABSI) are significant complications for hospitalized patients. Several different approaches have been used to reduce CLABSI.
Objective: This study aimed to (1) describe a systematic approach used to analyze and reduce CLABSI rates in a surgical ICU (SICU) at a quaternary care medical facility (CLABSI reduction bundle) and (2) examine the association of the bundle on CLABSI rates in the SICU, compared to six unexposed health system ICUs.
Methods: Retrospective analysis of 14,022 adult patients with > 0 central line days within a single health system in the southeastern United States. The CLABSI intervention bundle was created and implemented in July 2021. Single and multiple interrupted time series analyses were performed to assess the impact of the CLABSI bundle on CLABSI rate in SICU (compared to control ICUs) pre- and post-intervention. Secondary analyses examined the association of the bundle with ICU mortality and length of stay.
Results: The CLABSI bundle was associated with a significant immediate effect in reducing the CLABSI rate in the SICU compared with control ICUs. There was no significant change in the slope of CLABSI rate post-intervention, compared to control ICUs. There was no significant association of the CLABSI reduction bundle on ICU length of stay or mortality in the SICU.
Conclusion: The CLABSI bundle was associated with an immediate reduction in CLABSI incidence in the SICU compared to unexposed ICUs. A simple, bundled intervention can be effective in reducing CLABSI incidence in a surgical ICU population.
Keywords: Central venous catheters; ICU; infection prevention; learning health; quality improvement.
When in the intensive care unit (ICU), many patients have different lines, drains, catheters, and other devices inserted into the body to help care for them. Each device has a risk of getting infected and can make a patient’s hospital stay more complicated, longer, and require more intense treatments. One ICU at our health system performed a long-term quality improvement intervention to reduce and prevent these kinds of infections. Over the course of 4–6 months, multiple changes to daily patient care related to central lines were implemented. Our study examined the effects of this QI intervention. Using data from our ICU database, we determined that these changes decreased the number infections immediately after implementing them, but not over the long term. They also did not impact how long patients stayed in the hospital nor their risk of dying (mortality). These new protocols offer a way to reduce infections, and more work needs to be done to continue reducing them for patients in the ICU.