AI Article Synopsis

  • A new tool called the Infection Risk Scan (IRIS) has been developed to evaluate infection control and antimicrobial use across various hospitals.
  • The implementation of IRIS involved standardized measurements, such as patient comorbidities and hand hygiene performance, and was executed by trained local infection control practitioners in nine hospitals along the Dutch/Belgian border.
  • Results showed significant differences in infection control metrics between hospitals in Belgium and the Netherlands, highlighting areas for potential improvement in quality of care.

Article Abstract

Background: A tool, the Infection Risk Scan has been developed to measure the quality of infection control and antimicrobial use. This tool measures various patient-, ward- and care-related variables in a standardized way. We describe the implementation of this tool in nine hospitals in the Dutch/Belgian border area and the obtained results.

Methods: The IRIS consists of a set of objective and reproducible measurements: patient comorbidities, (appropriate) use of indwelling medical devices, (appropriate) use of antimicrobial therapy, rectal carriage of Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase producing Enterobacterales and their clonal relatedness, environmental contamination, hand hygiene performance, personal hygiene of health care workers and presence of infection prevention preconditions. The Infection Risk Scan was implemented by an expert team. In each setting, local infection control practitioners were trained to achieve a standardized implementation of the tool and an unambiguous assessment of data.

Results: The IRIS was implemented in 34 wards in six Dutch and three Belgian hospitals. The tool provided ward specific results and revealed differences between wards and countries. There were significant differences in the prevalence of ESBL-E carriage between countries (Belgium: 15% versus The Netherlands: 9.6%), environmental contamination (median adenosine triphosphate (ATP) level Belgium: 431 versus median ATP level The Netherlands: 793) and calculated hand hygiene actions based on alcohol based handrub consumption (Belgium: 12.5/day versus The Netherlands: 6.3/day) were found.

Conclusion: The Infection risk Scan was successfully implemented in multiple hospitals in a large cross-border project and provided data that made the quality of infection control and antimicrobial use more transparent. The observed differences provide potential targets for improvement of the quality of care.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8887653PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13756-022-01083-1DOI Listing

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