1 in 2 Catheter-Linked UTIs Avoidable, Study Says
A review of multiple international studies suggests that hospitals can cut their catheter-associated urinary tract infections by 52% by implementing simple systems that trigger staff to regularly check the patient still needs one.
"Interventions to routinely prompt physicians or nurses to remove unnecessary urinary catheters significantly decrease the rate of CA UTIs, and no evidence indicates that these interventions increase the need for re-catheterization," wrote the researchers, affiliated with the University of Michigan and Ann Arbor VA Medical Center.
The report is published in the September issue of the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.
"Many of the studies suggested that physicians simply forget to look for the catheter, or they forget to reassess," said Jennifer Meddings, MD, lead author of the report and a researcher and lecturer at the University of Michigan Department of Internal Medicine.
In an interview, Meddings said that only one in 10 U.S. hospitals is using such reminder systems. "Physicians simply forget to look for a catheter, and they also forget to reassess (whether the patient still needs one)" Meddings said. "Catheters then stay in for days when they are no longer necessary, and every day that they stay in, the risk of infection is increased."
Her report also notes that catheters "often are placed unnecessarily, remain in use without physician awareness and are not removed promptly when no longer needed.
"Catheters also cause discomfort, restrict mobility and delay hospital discharges. Interventions that prompt removal of unnecessary catheters may therefore enhance patient safety."
Removing them is not always a simple process. "In most hospitals, four key steps are required in the lifecycle of the urinary catheter before removal from the patient:
- The physician recognizes that a urinary catheter is present
- The physician recognizes that the catheter is unnecessary
- The physician writes the order for catheter removal
- The nurse removes the catheter in response to the order.
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John Silver (9/16/2010 at 8:14 AM)
The idea that physicians don't know about catheters in their patients is ludicrous. Catheters need to be ordered, they do not fall under independent nursing actions. If physicians don't know about them, maybe they need to be better physicians