Abstract

BackgroundAt Stanford, two surgical wards, E3 and F3, were responsible for 1/5 of hospital-acquired Clostridioides difficile infection (HO CDI) cases in the fiscal year 2018 (FY2018). We used a quality improvement framework with a goal to reduce yearly HO CDI episodes by 1/2 on these wards.MethodsA multidisciplinary quality improvement team was created with frontline nursing leaders and representatives from colorectal surgery, gynecology oncology, antimicrobial stewardship (ASP), infection prevention, and pharmacy. Coaching and instruction on quality improvement were provided as part of Stanford’s “Realizing Improvement through Team Empowerment” (RITE) program. Using A3 problem solving, root cause analysis identified key drivers, and interventions were performed. Cumulative HO CDI cases in FY2019 and weekly antibiotic days of therapy (DOT) on E3/F3 were monitored.ResultsReview of FY2018 HO CDI cases (n = 14) revealed the most common key driver as inappropriate antibiotic prescribing (8 cases, 57%). Multiple interventions were instituted (Figure 1). Three ASP interventions began February 2019: nursing questioned antibiotic choice/duration on daily interdisciplinary rounds (Figure 2), automatic infectious disease consultation for > 72 hours of piperacillin/tazobactam on gynecology/oncology patients, and twice-weekly rounds between ASP and a colorectal attending. Data from ASP/colorectal rounds from March 19, 2019 to April 16, 2019 showed means of 18.2 minutes taken for chart review and 4.4 minutes for discussion. 25 charts reviewed led to 16 (64%) ASP recommendations and 14/16 (87.5%) of recommendations accepted. Common interventions included: appropriate duration of antibiotics, clarification of the team’s planned duration, and review of microbiology data to narrow therapy. Mean DOT decreased from 35.28 to 21.61 (39%) since July 2018 (Figure 3). Patient volume and case mix index remained stable throughout, suggesting no impact on DOT. Though CDI cases did not decrease, interventions were in place for only 2 months (Figure 4).ConclusionWhile too early to determine its impact on HO CDI rates, a multi-disciplinary team approach utilizing A3 problem solving was successful in implementing effective ASP measures including nursing-led ASP and structured antibiotic timeouts. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.

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