Abstract

Background: Hamad General Hospital (HGH) is the principal provider of dialysis in the state of Qatar, comprising a total of four facilities in different cities. Infection rates in dialysis patients are increasingly used as a surrogate marker for measuring patient safety and quality of healthcare. These infections are associated with substantial morbidity, mortality, and excess healthcare costs. We observed an elevated rate of hemodialysis catheter-related bloodstream infections (HD-CRBSI) in our outpatient dialysis facilities (1.4/1,000 Central Venous Catheter [CVC] days) in 2011. Our goal was to reduce our HD-CRBSI rate by 80% within a period of four years in HGH ambulatory dialysis facilities. Methods: HD-CRBSIs are defined as the presence of positive blood cultures in a febrile catheter-dependent patient in the absence of alternative sources of infection upon clinical evaluation. The project was led by the HGH quality improvement program director in coordination with a multidisciplinary team (nephrologists, nurses, vascular coordinators, a patient educator, and an infection control team) after implementation of a bundle of infection prevention measures. Results: The rate of HD-CRBSI was reduced from 1.4/1,000 CVC days in 2011 to 0.014 in 2017, achieving a 99% reduction rate (p < 0.001). Conclusions: Strict implementation of our new infection prevention measures bundle is sufficient to significantly reduce HD-CRBSIs.

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