journal article
A multimodal approach to reduce the incidence of peripheral venous cannula bacteraemias and improve patient safety
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Incidence of peripheral venous cannula (PVC) bacteraemia have been rising in a trust in the south-west of England, with a 267% increase noted over the 2022/23 financial year compared with the previous year. AIM: To use a multimodal approach to reduce the incidence of PVC bacteraemia and improve patient safety. METHODS: The initiative consisted of an educational poster highlighting the severity of infection associated with PVCs alongside key prevention messages rooted in Trust policy. Teaching sessions, complementing the poster, were delivered by the infection prevention and control team to each clinical area. FINDINGS: The data showed that the provision of further educational resources and wider support resulted in a 54.5% decrease in the incidence of PVC bacteraemia in 2023/24 compared with the previous year. An audit undertaken in the fourth quarter of 2023/24 (January-March) found zero cases of PVC bacteraemia for the first time in 2 years. CONCLUSION: Dedication and collaborative working are vital for securing the success of quality improvement projects. PVC-related bacteraemias and the severity of infection remain an under-acknowledged and under-recognised topic within health care, with further research required.RDUH staff can access the full-text of this article by clicking on the 'Additional Link' above and logging in with NHS OpenAthens if prompted- Journal Article
- ppublish
- Humans
- *Bacteremia/prevention & control/epidemiology
- England/epidemiology
- Incidence
- *Patient Safety
- *Catheterization, Peripheral/adverse effects
- Quality Improvement
- Catheter-Related Infections/prevention & control/epidemiology
- Cannula
- Infection Control/methods
- Bacteraemia
- Peripheral venous cannula
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Surveillance