This course was written by Cindy Nissen, RN,
MSN, CWCN, and edited for presentation by Hi-R-Ed
Online, a continuing education program
development company. Hi-R-Ed Online is an
accredited provider of continuing education
courses for nurses, case managers, social
workers and registered dietitians.
The focus of today’s program is an examination
of
catheter-associated urinary tract infections.
This course will give healthcare team members a
better understanding of the causes of CAUTIs,
and best practices for how to prevent and manage
them.
Let's begin with our learning objectives.
The Learning Objectives for this course are
fairly straightforward.
While we will assume you have some knowledge of
diabetes and insulin pumps, we will make an
effort to provide you with a working knowledge
of insulin pumps, how they’re used, what options
there are when selecting a pump and continuous
monitor, and we will
define some of
the
terms used in the discussion of these
devices as we go.
The purpose of setting learning objectives at
the beginning of the course is to set the
framework and goals for the information that we
will cover.
Once the course is completed you should be able
to:
1. Describe 3 categories
of impact that CAUTIs may have on patients and healthcare
facilities.
2. Identify 4
indications for indwelling urinary catheter use.
3. Explain 3 best
practice recommendations to reduce CAUTI risk.
4. Describe 3 strategies
for teaching patients and their families about best practices used
to reduce the risk of CAUTI.
Before we get started,
think about
these questions if you work in a patient care facitlity:
--Do you know how many Foleys (indwelling urinary catheters) are
currently in use in your practice setting or unit?
--If Foleys are currently in use in your facility, do you know why they
are being
used?
--Do you know your facility’s CAUTI rates?
--What training do you have in place currently-related to catheter
insertion and catheter maintenance?
CAUTI Impacts
Now let’s cover some
background information to describe the impact of CAUTIs on patients and
healthcare facilities.
Patients and facilities may see impact on:
-Money (costs of care)
-Morbidity
-Mortality
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The National Healthcare Safety Network defines CAUTI as a
urinary tract infection or
UTI that occurs in a patient who has or had an indwelling urinary
catheter in place within the 48-hour period before the onset of the UTI.[1]
There is no minimum amount of time that the catheter must have been in
place in order to be considered a CAUTI and it may be symptomatic UTI (SUTI),
asymptomatic bacteremic UTI (ABUTI), or other UTI (OUTI). These will be
briefly discussed in a moment. Of the 1.7 million healthcare-acquired
infections (HAIs), UTIs represent 40% of these infections (680,000) and
is the most common HAI. Eighty percent of these (544,000) are
catheter-related.[2]
In acute care it is estimated that between 12-25% of all patients have a
catheter placed at some time during their stay and of those 50% have no
appropriate indication for its use. In long term care, an estimated
5-10% indwelling catheter prevalence rate and 11% in the home care
setting. Most catheters in the non-acute care setting are usually in
place for longer than 30 days. The costs of CAUTI are impressive. In
terms of
money,
CAUTI’s increase length of stay by 2-4 days or $400
to $500
million/annually.[2] Added costs include catheter related supplies,
laboratory specimen collections, and antimicrobial use, to name a few. If CAUTI results in a bloodstream infection, care costs increase to
$2500-3000/case.[3] Effective 10/1/2008, inpatient PPS hospitals do not
receive higher payment for hospital-acquired conditions like CAUTI.
There will be no reimbursement for the care and treatment of the CAUTI
acquired during the hospital stay. Costs in terms of
morbidity
include those on the urinary tract itself: pain/spasms/uncomfortable
feeling due to presence of catheter, strictures, urethral
erosion/trauma. The catheter may restrict the patient’s mobility and
increase risk for deep vein thrombosis (DVT), pressure ulcer and social
isolation or depression.[4] Sanjay Saint, MD refers to a urinary catheter
as a “one-point restraint.”[5] 17% of healthcare acquired bloodstream
infections are sourced from the urinary tract and are associated with a
10%
mortality
rate, equivalent to 13,000 deaths/year.[4]
1.
Citation: Wound Ostomy and Continence Nurses Society.
Catheter Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI): Fact Sheet.
Available at: http://c.ymcdn.com/sites/www.wocn.org/resource/collection/6D79B935-1AA0-4791-886F-E361D29F152D/Catheter_Associated_Urinary_Tract_Infections_(CAUTI)_-_FS_(2008).pdf
2.
Citation: Virginia Department of Health. Urinary Tract Infections and
Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections. Available at: http://www.vdh.virginia.gov/epidemiology/surveillance/hai/uti.htm
3.
Citation:
Hooton TM, Bradley SF, Cardenas DD, et al. Diagnosis, prevention, and
treatment of catheter-associated urinary tract infection in adults: 2009
international clinical practice guidelines from the Infectious Diseases
Society of America. Clinical Infectious Diseases. 2009;50(5):625-663.
Available at: http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/50/5/625.full
4.
Citation: Gould C. Catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI)
toolkit. Presentation available at: http://www.cdc.gov/HAI/pdfs/toolkits/CAUTItoolkit_3_10.pdf
5.
Citation: Saint S, Olmstead RN, Fakih MG, et al. Translating health
care-associated urinary tract infection prevention research into
practice via the bladder bundle. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf.
2009;35(9):449-455.
Rick Fields-Gardner
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