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1.
Am J Infect Control ; 44(12): 1539-1543, 2016 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27592160

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) are uniquely positioned to improve treatment of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) through targeted interventions, studies to date have not rigorously evaluated the influence of ASP involvement on clinical outcomes attributed to CDI. METHODS: We performed a quasiexperimental study of adult patients with CDI before (n = 307) and after (n = 285) a real-time ASP review was initiated. In the intervention group, an ASP pharmacist was notified of positive CDI results and consulted with the care team to initiate optimal therapy, minimize concomitant antibiotic and acid-suppressive therapy, and recommend surgical/infectious diseases consultation in complicated cases. The primary outcome was a composite of attributable 30-day mortality, intensive care unit admission, colectomy/ileostomy, and recurrence. RESULTS: A higher percentage of patients in the ASP intervention group had acid-suppressive therapy discontinued (30% vs 13%; P < .01). Among patients with severe CDI, more patients in the intervention group received an infectious diseases consultation (17% vs 10%; P = .04), received appropriate therapy with oral vancomycin (87% vs 59%; P <.01), and vancomycin was initiated earlier (mean, 1.1 vs 1.7 days; P <.01). Incidence of the composite outcome was not significantly different between the 2 groups (12.3% vs 14.7%; P = .40). CONCLUSIONS: ASP review and intervention improved CDI process measures. A decrease in composite outcomes was not found, which may be due to low baseline rates of attributable complications in our institution.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/administration & dosage , Clostridioides difficile/drug effects , Clostridioides difficile/isolation & purification , Clostridium Infections/drug therapy , Clostridium Infections/microbiology , Drug Therapy/standards , Drug Utilization/standards , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Clostridium Infections/mortality , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Non-Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Survival Analysis , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
2.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol ; 36(4): 424-30, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25782897

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Little is known about patient-specific factors contributing to central line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) outside of the intensive care unit (ICU). We sought to describe these factors and hypothesized that dialysis patients would comprise a significant proportion of this cohort. DESIGN: Retrospective observational study from January 2010 to December 2011. SETTING: An 880-bed tertiary teaching hospital. PATIENTS: Patients with CLABSI in non-ICU wards. METHODS: CLABSI patients were identified from existing infection-control databases and primary chart review was conducted. National Health and Safety Network (NHSN) definitions were utilized for CLABSI and pathogen classification. CLABSI rates were calculated per patient day. Total mortality rates were inclusive of hospice patients. RESULTS: Over a 2-year period, 104 patients incurred 113 CLABSIs for an infection rate of 0.35 per 1,000 patient days. The mean length of hospital stay prior to CLABSI was 16±13.3 days, which was nearly 3 times that of hospital-wide non-ICU length of stay. Only 11 patients (10.6%) received dialysis within 48 hours of CLABSI. However, 67% of patients had a hematologic malignancy, and 91.8% of those admitted with a malignant hematologic diagnosis were neutropenic at the time of CLABSI. Enterococcus spp. was the most common organism recovered, and half of all central venous catheters (CVCs) present were peripherally inserted central catheters (PICC lines). Mortality rates were 18.3% overall and 27.3% among dialysis patients. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with CLABSIs outside of the ICU, only 10.6% received dialysis prior to infection. However, underlying hematologic malignancy, neutropenia, and PICC lines were highly prevalent in this population.


Subject(s)
Catheter-Related Infections/etiology , Catheterization, Central Venous/adverse effects , Cross Infection/etiology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Catheter-Related Infections/epidemiology , Catheter-Related Infections/microbiology , Cross Infection/epidemiology , Cross Infection/microbiology , Female , Hematologic Neoplasms/complications , Humans , Kidney Diseases/complications , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Risk Factors , Tertiary Care Centers/statistics & numerical data , Young Adult
3.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol ; 34(8): 785-92, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23838218

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) tip malposition is potentially associated with complications, and postplacement adjustment of PICCs is widely performed. We sought to characterize the association between central line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) or venous thrombus (VT) and PICC adjustment. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: University of Michigan Health System, a large referral hospital. PATIENTS: Patients who had PICCs placed between February 2007 and August 2007. METHODS: The primary outcomes were development of CLABSI within 14 days or VT within 60 days of postplacement PICC adjustment, identified by review of patient electronic medical records. RESULTS: There were 57 CLABSIs (2.69/1,000 PICC-days) and 47 VTs (1.23/1,000 PICC-days); 609 individuals had 1, 134 had 2, and 33 had 3 or more adjustments. One adjustment was protective against CLABSI (P=.04), whereas 2 or 3 or more adjustments had no association with CLABSI (P=.58 and .47, respectively). One, 2, and 3 or more adjustments had no association with VT formation (P=.59, .85, and .78, respectively). Immunosuppression (P<.01), power-injectable PICCs (P=.05), and 3 PICC lumens compared with 1 lumen (P=.02) were associated with CLABSI. Power-injectable PICCs were also associated with increased VT formation (P=.03). CONCLUSIONS: Immunosuppression and 3 PICC lumens were associated with increased risk of CLABSI. Power-injectable PICCs were associated with increased risk of CLABSI and VT formation. Postplacement adjustment of PICCs was not associated with increased risk of CLABSI or VT.


Subject(s)
Bacteremia/epidemiology , Catheter-Related Infections/epidemiology , Catheterization, Central Venous/adverse effects , Catheterization, Peripheral/adverse effects , Cross Infection/epidemiology , Venous Thrombosis/epidemiology , Bacteremia/microbiology , Catheter-Related Infections/microbiology , Catheterization, Central Venous/methods , Catheterization, Peripheral/methods , Cross Infection/microbiology , Female , Fungemia/epidemiology , Fungemia/etiology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Risk Factors , Venous Thrombosis/etiology
4.
Am Heart J ; 159(3): 377-84, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20211298

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Racial disparities exist in the management of patients with cardiovascular disease in the United States. The aim of the study was to evaluate if a structured initiative for improving care of patients with acute myocardial infarction (Guidelines Applied in Practice [GAP]) led to comparable care of white and nonwhite patients admitted to GAP hospitals in Michigan. METHODS: Medicare patients comprised 2 cohorts: (1) those admitted before GAP implementation (n = 1,368) and (2) those admitted after GAP implementation (n = 1,489). The main outcome measure was adherence to guideline-based medications/recommendations and use of the GAP discharge tool. chi(2) and Fisher exact tests were used to determine differences between white patients (n = 2,367) and nonwhite patients (n = 490). RESULTS: In-hospital GAP tool and aspirin use significantly improved for white and nonwhite patients. beta-Blocker use in hospital improved significantly for nonwhite patients only (66% vs 83.3%; P = .04). At discharge, nonwhite patients were 28% and 64% less likely than white patients to have had the GAP discharge tool used (P = .004) and receive smoking cessation counseling (P < .001), respectively. Among white patients, GAP improved discharge prescription rates for aspirin by 10.8% (P < .001) and beta-blockers by 7.0% (P = .047). Nonwhite patients' aspirin prescriptions increased by 1.0% and beta-blocker prescriptions decreased by 6.0% (both P values nonsignificant). CONCLUSIONS: The GAP program led to significant increases in rates of evidence-based care in both white and nonwhite Medicare patients. However, nonwhite patients received less quality improvement discharge tool and smoking cessation counseling. Policies designed to reduce racial disparities in health care must address disparity in the delivery of quality improvement programs.


Subject(s)
Guideline Adherence , Healthcare Disparities , Hospitalization , Myocardial Infarction/ethnology , Myocardial Infarction/therapy , Racial Groups , Total Quality Management , Adrenergic beta-Antagonists/therapeutic use , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Aspirin/therapeutic use , Cohort Studies , Counseling/standards , Drug Prescriptions/statistics & numerical data , Evidence-Based Medicine , Female , Guideline Adherence/standards , Guideline Adherence/statistics & numerical data , Guideline Adherence/trends , Healthcare Disparities/statistics & numerical data , Healthcare Disparities/trends , Humans , Male , Medicare , Michigan , Middle Aged , Patient Discharge/standards , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Quality Indicators, Health Care , Racial Groups/statistics & numerical data , Smoking Cessation , Societies, Medical , Total Quality Management/statistics & numerical data , Total Quality Management/trends , United States , White People
5.
Am Heart J ; 154(3): 461-9, 2007 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17719291

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The American College of Cardiology's Guidelines Applied in Practice (GAP) initiative for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) has been shown to increase the use of guideline-based therapies and improve outcomes in patients with AMI. It is unknown whether hospitals that are more successful in using the standard discharge contract--a key component of GAP that emphasizes guideline-based medications, lifestyle modification, and follow-up planning--experience a proportionally greater improvement in patient outcomes. METHODS: Medicare patients treated for AMI in all 33 participating GAP hospitals in Michigan were enrolled. We aggregated the hospitals into 3 tertiles based on the rates of discharge contract use: 0% to 8.4% (tertile 1), >8.4% to 38.0% (tertile 2), and >38.0% to 61.1% (tertile 3). We analyzed 1-year follow-up mortality both pre- and post-GAP and compared the mortality decline post-GAP with discharge contract use according to tertile. RESULTS: There were 1368 patients in the baseline (pre-GAP) cohort and 1489 patients in the post-GAP cohort. After GAP implementation, mortality at 1 year decreased by 1.2% (P = .71), 1.2% (P = .68), and 6.0% (P = .03) for tertiles 1, 2, and 3, respectively. After multivariate adjustment, discharge contract use was significantly associated with decreased 1-year mortality in tertile 2 (odds ratio 0.43, 95% CI 0.22-0.84) and tertile 3 (odds ratio 0.45, 95% CI 0.27-0.75). CONCLUSIONS: Increased hospital utilization of the standard discharge contract as part of the GAP program is associated with decreased 1-year mortality in Medicare patient populations with AMI. Hospital efforts to promote adherence to guideline-based care tools such as the discharge contract used in GAP may result in mortality reductions for their patient populations at 1 year.


Subject(s)
Guideline Adherence , Myocardial Infarction/mortality , Myocardial Infarction/therapy , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Medicare , Patient Discharge , Records , Time Factors
6.
Arch Intern Med ; 166(11): 1164-70, 2006 Jun 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16772242

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Studies have shown that women with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) are less likely to receive evidence-based care compared with men. The American College of Cardiology's AMI Guidelines Applied in Practice (GAP) program has been shown to increase the rates of evidence-based medicine use and reduce mortality in patients with AMI. The objective of this study was to investigate the relative benefits of the GAP program in men and women. METHODS: By using a predesign-postdesign, standard orders, and a discharge tool to improve evidence-based indicator rates and long-term mortality in patients with AMI in Michigan, this study compared the success of GAP in men vs women. Logistic regression was used to develop predictive models for death at 30 days and 1 year in men and women. RESULTS: Use of evidence-based care, including use of beta-blockers and aspirin in men and women at hospital discharge and lipid-lowering agent use in men, was higher in the post-GAP sample (P<.01 for all). Use of the discharge tool promoted by the GAP program was independently protective against death at 1 year in women (adjusted odds ratio, 0.46; 95% confidence interval, 0.27-0.79), and a trend existed for similar results in men (adjusted odds ratio, 0.62; 95% confidence interval, 0.36-1.06). However, the tool was used slightly less often with women (27.9% vs 33.96%; P=.003). CONCLUSIONS: The GAP program increased the use of evidence-based therapies in male and female patients. In addition, the GAP discharge tool may decrease mortality rates at 1 year in patients with AMI; however, the tool was used less often with women. Greater use of the GAP discharge tool in women might narrow the post-MI sex mortality gap.


Subject(s)
Evidence-Based Medicine , Myocardial Infarction/drug therapy , Aged , Female , Guideline Adherence , Humans , Male , Myocardial Infarction/mortality , Sex Factors
7.
J Am Coll Cardiol ; 46(7): 1242-8, 2005 Oct 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16198838

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: We sought to assess the impact of the American College of Cardiology's Guidelines Applied in Practice (GAP) project for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) care, encompassing 33 acute-care hospitals in southeastern Michigan, on rates of mortality in Medicare patients treated in Michigan. BACKGROUND: The GAP project increases the use of evidence-based therapies in patients with AMI. It is unknown whether GAP also can reduce the rate of mortality in patients with AMI. METHODS: Using a before (n = 1,368) and after GAP implementation (n = 1,489) cohort study, 2,857 Medicare patients with AMI were studied to assess the influence of the GAP program on mortality. Multivariate models tested the independent impact of GAP after controlling for other conditions on in-hospital, 30-day, and one-year mortality. RESULTS: Average patient age was 76 years, 48% were women, and 16% represented non-white minorities. The rate of mortality decreased after GAP for each interval studied: hospital, 10.4% versus 13.6%; 30-day, 16.7% versus 21.6%; and one-year, 33.2% versus 38.3%; all p < 0.02. After multivariate adjustment, GAP correlated with a 21% to 26% reduction in mortality, particularly at 30 days (odds ratio of GAP to baseline 0.74; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.59 to 0.94; p = 0.012) and one year (odds ratio 0.78; 95% CI 0.64 to 0.95; p = 0.013), particularly in the patients for whom a standard discharge tool was used (1-year mortality, odds ratio 0.53; 95% CI 0.36 to 0.76; p = 0.0006). CONCLUSIONS: Embedding AMI guidelines into practice was associated with improved 30-day and one-year mortality. This benefit is most marked when patients are cared for using standardized, evidence-based clinical care tools.


Subject(s)
Myocardial Infarction/mortality , Myocardial Infarction/therapy , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Medicare , United States
8.
J Nurs Care Qual ; 19(2): 149-55, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15077832

ABSTRACT

As part of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' plan to implement Outcome-Based Quality Improvement (OBQI) in home health settings nationwide, a pilot project was initiated in 5 states. This article analyzes the results of the Michigan Peer Review Organization's (MPRO's) pilot project in terms of changes in patient outcomes that occurred in participating home health agencies between 2000 and 2001. Participating agencies had statistically significant improvements when comparing their performance in 2001 versus their performance in 2000. They did not achieve significant improvement though in comparison to the national reference group. Agencies should implement the OBQI process in its entirety annually until the desired outcome is achieved.


Subject(s)
Home Care Agencies/standards , Total Quality Management/organization & administration , Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, U.S. , Health Services Research , Humans , Michigan , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Pilot Projects , Professional Review Organizations , Program Evaluation , United States
9.
Oecologia ; 121(1): 129-137, 1999 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28307882

ABSTRACT

We investigated the impact of variation in densities of a guild of generalist predators on survival of young wolf spiders of the genus Schizocosa. Numbers of other spiders and centipedes were reduced by >80% in fenced 4-m2 plots in an experiment that was replicated twice in each of three forest locations. Schizocosa survival during the 1st month was low (<50%) in all three locations, but did not differ between predator-reduction and control plots. By the end of the 1st month, densities of the manipulated predators had converged in control and perturbed treatments, most likely because of reduced per capita mortality from lowered rates of intraguild predation and cannibalism in the experimental treatment. During the 2nd month of the experiment, centipedes and spiders other than Schizocosa again were removed from the experimental plots and, unlike the earlier period, numbers of intraguild predators in the predator-removal treatment remained lower than in control plots. Reducing densities of intraguild predators during the 2nd month improved survival of older juvenile Schizocosa by 75% in two of three locations on the forest floor. In addition to this evidence that intraguild predation can affect older juvenile Schizocosa, survival of Schizocosa during the last half of the experiment was negatively correlated with spatial variation in densities of gnaphosid and ctenid spiders. These two abundant families of cursorial spiders preyed on Schizocosa at a high rate in laboratory trials. Thus, variation in densities of intraguild predators did not influence the youngest Schizocosa, but did influence the survival of older juveniles, most likely due to variations in densities of other cursorial spiders.

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