Public Reporting on Central Line Blood Stream Infections
When a patient requires long-term access to medication or fluids through an
IV, a central line is put in place to provide easy access to a vein. It is placed
into a large vein in the neck, chest, groin, arm or abdomen. This is used instead
of having to frequently insert needles for treatments such as chemotherapy,
antibiotics and intravenous fluids, and feeding, or to take samples of blood
for testing.
A central line blood stream infection (CLI-BSI) can occur when bacteria and/or
fungi enters the blood stream, causing a patient to become sick. The bacteria
can come from a variety of places (e.g., skin, wounds, environment, etc.), though
it most often comes from the patient’s skin.
Hospitals follow best practices on how to prevent bacteria from entering into
a central line. Patients in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) often require a central
line since they are seriously ill, and will require a lot of medication, for
a long period of time.
More patient-specific information is available at www.ontario.ca/patientsafety
and www.oha.com/patientsafetytips
and www.oha.com/cleanhandsprotectlives.
In Ontario, all hospitals with ICUs are required to report into the Critical
Care Information System (CCIS) – a centralized data collection system
where hospitals report a variety of critical care information. Included in the
data is the CLI rate.
These Ontario hospitals are posting their quarterly CLI-BSI rate and case count
for those infections acquired in their facility, using the following formula:
total # of ICU related CLI-BSIs after 48 hours of central line placement
x 1000
total # of central line days for ICU patients 18 years and older
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