Quality Improvement Project Reducing Sputum Cultures for Pediatric Patients With a Tracheostomy

Author:

Harris Baila12,Kern Kristina1,Benner Christopher12,Moses James3,Artinian Hovig12

Affiliation:

1. aDepartment of Pediatrics, Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital, Grand Rapids, Michigan

2. bMichigan State University College of Human Medicine, Grand Rapids, Michigan

3. cQuality, Safety, and Experience, Corewell Health, Grand Rapids, Michigan

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Current research implies overuse of diagnostic testing and overtreatment in children with tracheostomies. There are no guidelines for obtaining sputum cultures for these patients, yet they are commonly obtained without significantly affecting management or outcomes. The aim of our quality improvement project was to decrease rate of sputum cultures in this population by 50%, from 64% to 32%. METHODS This was a single-center quality improvement project conducted in a pediatric emergency department (ED). Key drivers included: Standardized decision-making, appropriate culture collection, knowledge regarding colonization versus clinically relevant growth, and viral versus bacterial infections in this population. The study team developed an algorithm, used modification to electronic medical records orders, and provided education to drive change. Six months of preintervention and 12 months postintervention data were collected. Run charts/statistical process charts were created for the rate of cultures, length of stay, and return to the ED. RESULTS There were 159 patient encounters and the rate of sputum cultures decreased from 64% at baseline to 25% without change in length of stay or increased rate at which patients returned to the ED, including during local coronavirus disease 2019 and respiratory syncytial virus surges. We observed nonrandom data patterns after introduction of algorithm resulting in centerline shifts. CONCLUSIONS The study team was able to introduce an algorithm coinciding with a reduction in number of sputum cultures obtained. Next steps would be determining safety and efficacy of such an algorithm over a larger population.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Reference27 articles.

1. Care variations and outcomes for children hospitalized with bacterial tracheostomy-associated respiratory infections;Russell;Hosp Pediatr,2017

2. Association of endotracheal aspirate culture variability and antibiotic use in mechanically ventilated pediatric patients;Prinzi;JAMA Netw Open,2021

3. Diagnosis, management, and outcomes of pediatric tracheostomy-associated infections: a scoping review;Morrison;Pediatr Pulmonol,2022

4. Understanding reasons clinicians obtained endotracheal aspirate cultures and impact on patient management to inform diagnostic stewardship initiatives;Sick-Samuels;Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol,2020

5. Pediatric ventilator-associated infections: the Ventilator-Associated INfection Study;Willson;Pediatr Crit Care Med,2017

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