Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection Reduction in a Pediatric Safety Engagement Network.

Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) are a leading cause of health care-associated infection. Catheter insertion bundles (IBs) and maintenance bundles (MBs) have been developed to prevent CAUTIs but have not been extensively validated for use in pediatric populations.

We report the CAUTI prevention efforts of a large network of children's hospitals.

Children's hospitals joined the Children's Hospitals' Solutions for Patient Safety engagement network from 2011 to 2017, using an open start time engagement approach, and elected to participate in CAUTI prevention efforts, with 26 submitting data initially and 128 at the end. CAUTI prevention recommendations were first released in May 2012, and IBs and MBs were released in May 2014. Hospitals reported on CAUTIs, patient-days, and urinary catheter-line days and tracked reliability to each bundle. For the network, run charts or control charts were used to plot CAUTI rates, urinary catheter use, and reliability to each bundle component.

After the introduction of the pediatric CAUTI IBs and MBs, CAUTI rates across the network decreased 61.6%, from 2.55 to 0.98 infections per 1000 catheter-line days. Centerline shifts occurred both before and after the 2015 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CAUTI definition change. Urinary catheter use rates did not decline during the intervention period. Network reliability to the IBs and MBs increased to 95.4% and 86.9%, respectively.

IBs and MBs aimed at preventing CAUTIs were introduced across a large network of children's hospitals. Across the network, the rate of urinary tract infections among hospitalized children with indwelling urinary catheters decreased 61.6%.

Pediatrics. 2020 Sep 03 [Epub ahead of print]

Charles B Foster, Kathy Ackerman, Vera Hupertz, Laurie Mustin, Joann Sanders, Patricia Sisson, Rachel E Wenthe

Cleveland Clinic Children's, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio; ., Cleveland Clinic Children's, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio., Children's Hospitals' Solutions for Patient Safety, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; and., Cook Children's Health Care System, Fort Worth, Texas.

Go Beyond the Abstract and Read a Commentary by the Authors