implementing technologies for the reduction of hospital acquired

Post on 14-Feb-2017

221 Views

Category:

Documents

1 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Implementing Technologies for the Reduction of 

Hospital Acquired Infections

AHCA 2015October 12, 2015 / 1:00 – 2:00 pm 

Learning Objectives• Identify the human and financial costs impacting healthcare facilities

• Review typical infection control challenges – the commonly‐recognized and the often‐overlooked 

• Identify healthcare technologies that address infection control

• Compare the efficacy, cost and potential savings of various technology solutions 

Ebola 2014

Dallas Ebola Patient IncidentTravel History – Outbreak Area Entered into EMR

Information was not easily accessible in

the record

1 in 25 Hospital Patients 

32,479 People Died in Traffic Accidents

75,000 Hospital Patients Died from a Hospital Acquired Infection

75,000 Hospital Patients Died from a Hospital Acquired Infection in one Year

6,250 die each month

206 die each day

8 die each hour

Cost to Hospitals of HAIs:

$10 Billion

Cost Per EpisodeCentral Line

Infection

$45,000

Catheter-Related Urinary Tract

Infection

$9,000

C. diff.Infection

$11,000

Ventilator-Related

Pneumonia

$40,000Surgical Site

Infection

$21,000

New CMS Penalties as of Oct 2014

43% of hospitals in Florida scored in the range subject to payment reduction

Infection Control Challenges

Germ Survival 

• Rotavirus: 60 days

• VRE: 4 months

• Acinetobacterspp: 5 months

• C.diffspores: 5 months

• MRSA: 7 months

• E. coli: 16 months

• S. typhimurium: 4.2 years

KRAMER, A., SCHWEBKE, I. & KAMPF, G. 2006. How long do nosocomial pathogens persist on inanimate surfaces? A systematic review. BMC Infect Dis. 6:130.

Surfaces Re‐contaminate Quickly After Cleaning  

“Intrinsic bacterial burden associated with intensive care unit hospital beds: Effects of disinfection on population recovery and mitigation of potential infection risk ” American Journal of Infection Control 40 (2012) 907‐12

Policy and Procedure Compliance

• Hand Hygiene Compliance

• Surgical site infection challenges

• Room cleaning issues

• Medical equipment cross contamination

• IT device cross contamination

Technologies Addressing HAIs

SimpleEffectiveProactive Patient Solution

Automated Compliance Protocol Support Ventilator Associated Infections

Automated Compliance Protocol Support Ventilator Associated Infections

CLEANING AND DISINFECTION APPLIANCES

Hospital stays from C. difficile infections tripled in the last decade and are linked to 14,000 deaths in the US each year – CDC Report 2012

Continuous Disinfection405nm visible light

fixtures 

Antimicrobial Copper 2014 top 10 technology watch lists 

Salgado et. al. Copper surfaces reduce the rate of healthcare-acquired infection in the intensive care unit. Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, Vol. 34, No. 5, May 2013, pp. 479-486

*HAI cost projections based on AHRQ estimates*Estimated $52,000 to “copperize” 8 ICU Rooms (prototype pricing)

Pedigo

Pedigo 7500 Stretcher with standard hand rails $3450

Pedigo 7500 Stretcher with CuVerro hand rails  $3845  

Pedigo IV Stand

P‐1080‐6 Stainless Steel IV Stand$331.50P‐10833‐6 CuVerro IV Stand  $551.75

P‐3301 Stainless Steel Handle$ 98.25P‐3302‐BlK Black Handle $ 89.75P‐3303 CuVerro Handle $147.75

Pedigo Utility Table

SG‐80‐A‐SS $639.25CuVerro on drawer faces and handles $814.75

Just Manufacturing

Modular Services Corporation 

Operator Interface Technology Products

CuVerro Keyboard $300Wrist Rest $ 60CuVerro Mouse $ 99

SteriDesign SteriHood Keyboard Cleaner

Single keyboard hood $49

“Seventy‐eight percent of doctors were aware that mobile phones could carry pathogenic bacteria, but only 8% cleaned their phones regularly” ‐ National Center for Biotechnology Information 2012

Hands Free Voice Activated Wireless Phones

Antimicrobial Coating

SteriDesign SteriBox

Disinfect cordless phones, remote controls,keys, badges, and mobile devices. Cycle time 10 minutes. 

SteriBox  $39

UV and UVC Disinfection Robots

• TruD• Xenex• ChlorDiSys• Steris Pathogon UV 

Steris VaproQuip

• Hydrogen Peroxide Sterilant Decontamination Room

ANTIMICROBIAL PROTECTION

• Touch free – reducing cross‐contamination

“Bacteria in hospital ice machines blamed for patient death”Healthcare Facilities Today May 2014

PhotoPlasmaSolutions

Wave to Open Door Hardware

"microbiological analysis of swabs taken from the cuffs and pocket mouths of physicians' white coats in an acute care hospital showed that 91.3% of the coats had bacterial contamination." ‐World Health & Population 2010

“Mucormycosis outbreak associated with hospital linens” – 2014 CDC Report

Fabric Contamination – Cubical Curtains, Linens, Upholstery, Lab Coats

Antimicrobial Fabric Technology

Superbug CRE Outbreak

• Advocate Lutheran General‐44 infected, 0 deaths• Carolinas Health System, 18 people infected, 2 died• Virginia Mason, 32 patients infected, 11 died• UCLA  179 patients affected, 7 infected, 2 died• UPMC 18 patients infected, 0 deaths

ERCP

Olympus Scope Issue

What is being done to halt the spread?

• Revision of scope cleaning protocols• Implementation of culturing cleaned scopes before patient use

• Addition of ETO sterilization to the scope cleaning process

Technology Solutions‐Surgical Site Infections

• SURGICAL SITE INFECTION ISSUES

Infection Control and Surgical Lights 

Modular Ceiling Solutions and HAIs

Modular Ceiling Solutions and HAIs

Surgical Instrument Tracking 

Medical Device Barcoding Solutions 

RFID Handwashing Compliance Solutions

HAIs and Real Time Locating Systems

Big Data Mining and HAI’s Using the baseline of EMR data, the system implemented three different plans for reducing infections, eventually finding a solution that could reduce those infections —generally affecting one in 20 hospital patients — by 40 percent.

"It would have taken one hospital 64 years" to achieve that result, Perlin said. But for a system of HCA's size with access to hundreds of hospitals' data, it took 43 hospitals in 18 months.‐ Dr. Jonathan Perlin CMO of HCA – Nashville Business Journal Aug 2015

Hospitals and Professionals That Have Demonstrated Meaningful Use of Certified EHR Technology 2014

80% 60%

FEDERAL HEALTH IT STRATEGIC PLAN 2015 – 2020

Potential of Future Antimicrobial Resistant Infection Outbreaks

Technology HAI Summary• Effective passive and active technologies available • From fixtures to fabrics to devices to data analytics• Federal mandates driving results• Quick ROI compared to average $25,000 HAI event cost 

• 20 percent reduction ‐ Save 41 lives/ day• Together – Owners/Architects/Contractors can make real impact by properly implementing effective technologies

Questions / Discussion

Ted Hoodted.hood@gbainc.com

Jolene Lyonsjolene.lyons@gbainc.com

Gene Burton & Associates800‐443‐1415

www.gbainc.com

Ted Hood, BArch Senior Vice President / COO

GBA

Ted.Hood@gbainc.comJolene.Lyons@gbainc.com

1‐800‐443‐1415

Jolene Lyons, RN, CNOR, CASCProject Manager

GBA

top related