• Acad Emerg Med · Jan 2013

    Comparative Study

    Reducing blood culture contamination in the emergency department: an interrupted time series quality improvement study.

    • Wesley H Self, Theodore Speroff, Carlos G Grijalva, Candace D McNaughton, Jacki Ashburn, Dandan Liu, Patrick G Arbogast, Stephan Russ, Alan B Storrow, and Thomas R Talbot.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, USA. wesley.self@vanderbilt.edu
    • Acad Emerg Med. 2013 Jan 1; 20 (1): 89-97.

    ObjectivesBlood culture contamination is a common problem in the emergency department (ED) that leads to unnecessary patient morbidity and health care costs. The study objective was to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of a quality improvement (QI) intervention for reducing blood culture contamination in an ED.MethodsThe authors developed a QI intervention to reduce blood culture contamination in the ED and then evaluated its effectiveness in a prospective interrupted times series study. The QI intervention involved changing the technique of blood culture specimen collection from the traditional clean procedure to a new sterile procedure, with standardized use of sterile gloves and a new materials kit containing a 2% chlorhexidine skin antisepsis device, a sterile fenestrated drape, a sterile needle, and a procedural checklist. The intervention was implemented in a university-affiliated ED and its effect on blood culture contamination evaluated by comparing the biweekly percentages of blood cultures contaminated during a 48-week baseline period (clean technique) and 48-week intervention period (sterile technique), using segmented regression analysis with adjustment for secular trends and first-order autocorrelation. The goal was to achieve and maintain a contamination rate below 3%.ResultsDuring the baseline period, 321 of 7,389 (4.3%) cultures were contaminated, compared to 111 of 6,590 (1.7%) during the intervention period (p < 0.001). In the segmented regression model, the intervention was associated with an immediate 2.9% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.2% to 3.2%) absolute reduction in contamination. The contamination rate was maintained below 3% during each biweekly interval throughout the intervention period.ConclusionsA QI assessment of ED blood culture contamination led to development of a targeted intervention to convert the process of blood culture collection from a clean to a fully sterile procedure. Implementation of this intervention led to an immediate and sustained reduction of contamination in an ED with a high baseline contamination rate.© 2013 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

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