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Incidence of and risk factors for local complications of peripheral venous catheters in patients older than 70 years: Empirical research quantitative. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers conducted a study on patients aged 70 and older to evaluate the occurrence of local complications from peripheral venous catheters, focusing on risk factors and their impact on patient outcomes.
  • The study involved monitoring 322 patients in a French hospital, revealing an incidence rate of complications at 50.5 per 1000 catheter-days, with factors like dressing replacement and specific medications increasing the risk.
  • Findings indicated that complications led to longer hospital stays, suggesting the need for careful clinical monitoring to improve patient care for this age group.

Article Abstract

Aims: To assess the incidence density of local complications of peripheral venous catheters in patients aged 70 years and older, to identify risk factors for local complications of peripheral venous catheters, to describe microbiological epidemiology and to assess the impact of complications on patient outcomes.

Design: Prospective, observational, single-centre study.

Methods: Patients 70 years and older admitted to the geriatric department of a teaching hospital in France between December 2019 and May 2020 were considered for inclusion if they had a peripheral venous catheter during their stay. Nurses checked the catheter insertion site three times a day for local complications; physicians ensured the follow-up of complications. The STROBE checklist was used in this prospective observational study.

Results: A total of 322 patients were included, with 849 peripheral venous catheters; the median age was 88 years and 182 (56.5%) were women. The incidence density of local complications was 50.5/1000 peripheral venous catheter-days. Risk factors for local complications on multivariate analysis were dressing replacement (OR 1.18), furosemide (OR 1.11) and vancomycin (OR 1.60) infusion, urinary continence (OR 1.09) and hematoma at the catheter insertion site (OR 1.15). Thirteen cellulitis and three abscesses were diagnosed. Occurrence of a local complication was associated with a 3-day increased duration of hospital stay (17 vs. 14 days).

Conclusion: Risk factors for peripheral venous catheter local complications include urinary continence, furosemide or vancomycin infusion, hematoma at the peripheral venous catheter insertion site or dressing replacement.

Implication For The Patient Care: Closer clinical monitoring may help reduce the occurrence of local peripheral venous catheters complication in patients 70 years and older.

Relevance To Clinical Practice: Patients at greater risk of peripheral venous catheter local complications deserve closer clinical monitoring or improved preventive measures, which may be beneficial to reduce the length of hospital stay.

No Patient Or Public Contribution: The study was designed to describe risk factors for local complications of peripheral venous catheters in order to reinforce surveillance in this specific population by nurses and medical staffs. Patients had their peripheral venous catheter insertion site checked thrice a day by the nurse in charge as part of usual care. They, as service users, caregivers or members of the public, were not solicited for data collection, analysis, interpretation or preparation of the manuscript.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jocn.16732DOI Listing

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