Abstract
BackgroundInfection control needs user-friendly standardized instruments to measure the compliance to guidelines and to implement targeted improvement actions. This abstract describes a tool to measure the quality of infection control and antimicrobial use, the Infection Risk Scan (IRIS). It has been applied in a hospital, several nursing homes and a rehabilitation clinic in the Netherlands.MethodThe IRIS consists of a set of objective reproducible measurements, combining patient- and healthcare related variables, such as: hand hygiene compliance, environmental contamination using ATP measurements, prevalence of resistant microorganisms by active screening, availability of infection control preconditions, personal hygiene of healthcare workers, appropriate use of indwelling medical devices and appropriate use of antimicrobials. Results are visualized in a spider plot using traffic light colors to facilitate the interpretation.ResultsThe IRIS provided ward specific results within the hospital that were the basis for targeted improvement programs resulting in measurable improvements. Hand hygiene compliance increased from 43% to 66% (more than 1000 observations per IRIS, p < 0.000) and ATP levels were significantly reduced (p < 0.000). In the nursing homes, large differences were observed with environmental contamination as common denominator. Most remarkable were the difference in Extended Spectrum Beta-Lactamase Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) prevalence (mean 11%, range 0–21%).ConclusionThe bundle approach and visualization of the IRIS makes it a useful infection prevention tool providing standardization and transparency. Targeted interventions can be started based on the results of the improvement plot and repeated IRIS can show the effect of interventions. In that way, a quality control cycle with continuous improvement can be achieved.
Highlights
Infection control needs user-friendly standardized instruments to measure the compliance to guidelines and to implement targeted improvement actions
Hand hygiene compliance increased from 43% to 66% and Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) levels were significantly reduced (p < 0.000)
Most remarkable were the difference in Extended Spectrum Beta-Lactamase Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) prevalence
Summary
Infection control needs user-friendly standardized instruments to measure the compliance to guidelines and to implement targeted improvement actions. This abstract describes a tool to measure the quality of infection control and antimicrobial use, the Infection Risk Scan (IRIS). It has been applied in a hospital, several nursing homes and a rehabilitation clinic in the Netherlands. An increase in HAI is expected due to the growing number of vulnerable and elderly patients and the emergence in antimicrobial resistance [2, 3]. We describe the IRIS-method, it’s implementation and the results obtained in a hospital, several nursing homes and a rehabilitation clinic.
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