Abstract

Objective: To determine if the institution of a ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) prevention protocol was associated with VAP decrease in mechanically ventilated patients at a long-term acute care (LTAC) hospital over time. Introduction: VAP is the most common serious nosocomial infectious disease in mechanically ventilated patients. It has a high mortality and morbidity and significantly increases the cost of care. Design: A prospective preintervention and postintervention observational study comparing the number of episodes of VAP per 1000 patient ventilator-days in the 16 months preceding and 120 months (10 years) after the introduction of a VAP prevention protocol. Setting: A 73-bed, university-affiliated LTAC hospital. Methods: The implementation of a VAP prevention protocol included the following: (1) head of bed raised at 30°; (2) twice-weekly whole-body chlorhexidine-based bath with mupirocin 2% ointment applied to nares; (3) adequate hand washing; (4) adequate nutrition; (5) early tracheotomy by Day 7 if patients had endotracheal tubes; (6) monitor staff compliance; (7) infection control–run campaign involving posters, handouts, small group education events, positive reinforcement of good infection control practices, and focus on hand washing and universal precautions. Results: The initial VAP rate of 6.1 fell to 1.98/1000 ventilator-days within 5 months ( P < .001), and this was maintained. Relative risk was 0.32 ( P = .001) (68% relative risk reduction). Conclusion: The institution of a VAP prevention protocol showed a significant reduction in VAP episodes after the first 5 months of implementation. This rate was sustained for 10 years.

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