Electrifying the case review process for better speed, reach, and impact

Background: Prevention of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) requires timely feedback to and input from all staff involved in patient care to best identify practice gaps and improvement targets. However, multidisciplinary review of HAI events can be challenging to promptly complete given staffi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jennifer Gutowski, Melissa Bronstein, Adam Tatro, Stephany Frey, Emil Lesho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2023-06-01
Series:Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology
Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2732494X23003637/type/journal_article
_version_ 1797670840499699712
author Jennifer Gutowski
Melissa Bronstein
Adam Tatro
Stephany Frey
Emil Lesho
author_facet Jennifer Gutowski
Melissa Bronstein
Adam Tatro
Stephany Frey
Emil Lesho
author_sort Jennifer Gutowski
collection DOAJ
description Background: Prevention of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) requires timely feedback to and input from all staff involved in patient care to best identify practice gaps and improvement targets. However, multidisciplinary review of HAI events can be challenging to promptly complete given staffing shortages and the excess administrative burden of emailed and printed forms and disjointed analyses, reporting, and visualization tools. Plagued by a lack of feedback from attending and ordering physicians, difficulty transcribing and analyzing nonstandardized data, and challenges in summarizing and distributing actionable findings, we sought to reduce turnaround time (TAT), improve data collection, and broaden communication of HAI contributing factors and proposed solutions. Methods: A secure web application for electronic data capture and reporting, Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap), was used; the software application is free to nonprofit organizations. The review process is now initiated by an infection preventionist entering HAI information into an initial survey, which automatically cascades information into 4 subsequent surveys, distributed through automated email links, providing an opportunity for individual responses from the nursing unit, the attending provider, an infectious disease physician, and the ordering provider for the positive test that detected the HAI. Survey questions focus on evaluation of adherence to CDC and SHEA HAI prevention strategies. Reminders are automatically generated and continue to be sent to involved staff until their portion is completed. Survey responses are automatically summarized upon completion of all reviews and are shared with several stakeholders, including hospital leadership, the care team, infection prevention staff, and quality-control partners (Fig.). Discrete qualitative and quantitative data are exported in a standard application-programming interface (API) format for immediate analysis and interpretation. Results: After the review process was launched using new electronic technology, the average TAT and completion rate improved from 23 days and 40% to 7 days and 95%, respectively. Input from ordering and attending physicians, once extremely rare, became frequent. Nuanced insight into causative and preventive factors, previously unachievable, occurred during review of all 38 HAIs reported in December 2022. Reviewers believed that 48% of HAIs reviewed could have been prevented. Conclusions: Applying electronic technology to HAI case review improved completion and timeliness of reviews by both providers and nurses. By sharing data and insights with all stakeholders in real time, the new procedure permitted multidirectional communication between the care teams and increased awareness of patient harm as well as ownership of patient safety. Our process is freely and readily generalizable to any nonprofit healthcare facility.
first_indexed 2024-03-11T21:06:38Z
format Article
id doaj.art-33957bb642fa4c48b5fb613050c9c31c
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2732-494X
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-11T21:06:38Z
publishDate 2023-06-01
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format Article
series Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology
spelling doaj.art-33957bb642fa4c48b5fb613050c9c31c2023-09-29T12:56:56ZengCambridge University PressAntimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology2732-494X2023-06-013s95s9510.1017/ash.2023.363Electrifying the case review process for better speed, reach, and impactJennifer GutowskiMelissa BronsteinAdam TatroStephany FreyEmil LeshoBackground: Prevention of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) requires timely feedback to and input from all staff involved in patient care to best identify practice gaps and improvement targets. However, multidisciplinary review of HAI events can be challenging to promptly complete given staffing shortages and the excess administrative burden of emailed and printed forms and disjointed analyses, reporting, and visualization tools. Plagued by a lack of feedback from attending and ordering physicians, difficulty transcribing and analyzing nonstandardized data, and challenges in summarizing and distributing actionable findings, we sought to reduce turnaround time (TAT), improve data collection, and broaden communication of HAI contributing factors and proposed solutions. Methods: A secure web application for electronic data capture and reporting, Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap), was used; the software application is free to nonprofit organizations. The review process is now initiated by an infection preventionist entering HAI information into an initial survey, which automatically cascades information into 4 subsequent surveys, distributed through automated email links, providing an opportunity for individual responses from the nursing unit, the attending provider, an infectious disease physician, and the ordering provider for the positive test that detected the HAI. Survey questions focus on evaluation of adherence to CDC and SHEA HAI prevention strategies. Reminders are automatically generated and continue to be sent to involved staff until their portion is completed. Survey responses are automatically summarized upon completion of all reviews and are shared with several stakeholders, including hospital leadership, the care team, infection prevention staff, and quality-control partners (Fig.). Discrete qualitative and quantitative data are exported in a standard application-programming interface (API) format for immediate analysis and interpretation. Results: After the review process was launched using new electronic technology, the average TAT and completion rate improved from 23 days and 40% to 7 days and 95%, respectively. Input from ordering and attending physicians, once extremely rare, became frequent. Nuanced insight into causative and preventive factors, previously unachievable, occurred during review of all 38 HAIs reported in December 2022. Reviewers believed that 48% of HAIs reviewed could have been prevented. Conclusions: Applying electronic technology to HAI case review improved completion and timeliness of reviews by both providers and nurses. By sharing data and insights with all stakeholders in real time, the new procedure permitted multidirectional communication between the care teams and increased awareness of patient harm as well as ownership of patient safety. Our process is freely and readily generalizable to any nonprofit healthcare facility.https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2732494X23003637/type/journal_article
spellingShingle Jennifer Gutowski
Melissa Bronstein
Adam Tatro
Stephany Frey
Emil Lesho
Electrifying the case review process for better speed, reach, and impact
Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology
title Electrifying the case review process for better speed, reach, and impact
title_full Electrifying the case review process for better speed, reach, and impact
title_fullStr Electrifying the case review process for better speed, reach, and impact
title_full_unstemmed Electrifying the case review process for better speed, reach, and impact
title_short Electrifying the case review process for better speed, reach, and impact
title_sort electrifying the case review process for better speed reach and impact
url https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2732494X23003637/type/journal_article
work_keys_str_mv AT jennifergutowski electrifyingthecasereviewprocessforbetterspeedreachandimpact
AT melissabronstein electrifyingthecasereviewprocessforbetterspeedreachandimpact
AT adamtatro electrifyingthecasereviewprocessforbetterspeedreachandimpact
AT stephanyfrey electrifyingthecasereviewprocessforbetterspeedreachandimpact
AT emillesho electrifyingthecasereviewprocessforbetterspeedreachandimpact