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National Action Plan to Prevent Health Care-Associated Infections: ROAD MAP TO ELIMINATION - PDF
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1 National Action Plan to Prevent Health Care-Associated Infections: ROAD MAP TO ELIMINATION 2013
2 National Action Plan to Prevent Health Care-Associated Infections: Road Map to Elimination April U.S. Department of Health & Human Services: Administration for Community Living Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Food and Drug Administration Health Resources and Services Administration Indian Health Service National Institutes of Health Office of the Secretary Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology U.S. Department of Defense U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
3 TABLE OF CONTENTS PART 1: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY, METRICS, AND GOALS I. INTRODUCTION Page 1 II. PHASE ONE: ACUTE CARE HOSPITALS CHAPTER SUMMARIES Page 5 III. PHASE TWO: CHAPTER SUMMARIES FOR SELECT OUTPATIENT SETTINGS AND INFLUENZA VACCINATION OF HEALTH CARE PERSONNEL IV. PHASE THREE: LONG-TERM CARE FACILITIES CHAPTER SUMMARY Page 9 Page 12 V. HAI PREVENTION TARGET GOALS Page 14 Table 1. Current HAI Metrics and Targets Five-Year Goals ( ) Page 15 Table 2. Proposed ESRD Facility HAI Reduction Measures and Goals Page 17 VI. CONCLUSION: A NATIONAL COMMITMENT TO SAFE, QUALITY HEALTH CARE Page 19 PART 2: FRAMEWORK I. INTRODUCTION Page 20 Table 3. Departmental and HHS Operating Division Roles and Activities in Implementing the National Action Plan to Prevent Health Care-Associated Infections: Road Map to Elimination Page 22 Figure 1. Organizational Structure of the HAI Steering Committee Page 23 Table 4. HHS Action Plan to Prevent Health Care-Associated Infections (2009) Priority Areas and Five-Year Goals Page 24 II. CHANGING LANDSCAPE Page 28 III. TEN THEMES FOR TRANSLATING STRATEGY TO ACTION Page 37 IV. CONCLUSION Page 40 PART 3: PHASE ONE ACUTE CARE HOSPITALS I. INTRODUCTION Page 41 Chapter 1: Research I. INTRODUCTION Page 42 II. PROGRESS MADE IN HAI PREVENTION RESEARCH, FYS Page 43 III. STATE OF THE ART AND IDENTIFIED GAPS IN KNOWLEDGE AND PRACTICE IV. LONG-TERM PRIORITIZATION, COORDINATION, AND EVALUATION OF RESEARCH EFFORTS V. CONCLUSION AND VISION FOR THE FUTURE: RESEARCH AS THE FOUNDATION OF A LEARNING HEALTH CARE SYSTEM Page 46 Page 59 Page 60 Table 5. Status of Identified Priority Research Projects in the 2009 HHS HAI Action Plan Page 62 Chapter 2: Information Systems and Technology I. INTRODUCTION Page 64 II. MAINTAINING THE FOUNDATION FOR HAI DATA INTEGRATION AND INTEROPERABILITY Page 66 III. COORDINATION OF EFFORTS: INTERAGENCY WORKING GROUP Page 67 i
4 IV. WORK GROUP GOALS, TASKS, AND OPERATIONS Page 68 V. HAI DATA AND DATA INVENTORY Page 70 VI. INTEGRATING SOURCES OF DATA Page 71 VII. CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES Page 72 VIII. CONCLUSION Page 73 Chapter 3: Incentives and Oversight I. INTRODUCTION Page 74 II. REGULATORY OVERSIGHT Page 74 III. VALUE-BASED PURCHASING FINANCIAL INCENTIVES Page 78 Table 6. Payments Based on Medicare Severity Diagnosis Related Group Assignment and Present on Admission Status Page 89 IV. TRANSPARENCY AND ASSOCIATED INCENTIVES Page 94 V. RELATED INITIATIVES ADDRESSING HAIS Page 99 VI. CONCLUSION Page 108 Chapter 4: Outreach and Messaging I. INTRODUCTION Page 110 II. GOALS Page 111 III. TARGET AUDIENCE Page 112 Table 7. HAI Target Audiences and Key Messages, Tactics, and Materials/Products Page 113 IV. PARTNERSHIP DEVELOPMENT Page 120 V. EVALUATION Page 120 VI. ACTIVITIES OF PARTICIPATING HHS OPERATING AND STAFF DIVISIONS AND OTHER FEDERAL AGENCIES Page 121 VII. CONCLUSION Page 126 PART 4: PHASE TWO OUTPATIENT SETTINGS AND INFLUENZA VACCINATION OF HEALTH CARE PERSONNEL Chapter 5: Ambulatory Surgical Centers I. INTRODUCTION Page 127 II. BACKGROUND Page 127 Table 8. Infection Control Lapses Identified during Three-State Pilot Activity Page 129 III. PROGRESS MADE Page 130 IV. REMAINING NEEDS AND PREVENTION OPPORTUNITIES Page 133 V. NEXT STEPS: COLLABORATIONS FOR SHARED SOLUTIONS Page 136 VI. CONCLUSION Page 141 Chapter 6: End-Stage Renal Disease Facilities I. INTRODUCTION Page 142 II. BACKGROUND Page 142 III. HEALTH CARE-ASSOCIATED INFECTIONS IN ESRD Page 144 ii
5 IV. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR PREVENTION PRIORITIES IN ESRD FACILITIES Page 148 V. METRICS AND EVALUATION Page 154 Table 9. Five-Year National Metrics and Evaluation Targets Page 155 VI. INCENTIVES AND CHALLENGES Page 159 VII. INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGY Page 163 VIII. FUTURE DIRECTIONS Page 164 IX. SUMMARY OF RECOMMENDATIONS Page 168 X. CONCLUSION Page 170 Table 10. HHS Ongoing Collaborative Projects Related to Reducing HAIs in ESRD Facilities Page 171 Chapter 7: Influenza Vaccination of Health Care Personnel I. INTRODUCTION Page 174 Figure 2. Estimated Influenza Vaccination (Trivalent) Coverage, Health Care Personnel Page 175 II. BACKGROUND Page 176 III. ADDRESSING HCP VACCINATION RATES Page 181 IV. MEASUREMENT OF INFLUENZA VACCINATION AMONG HCP Page 185 V. NEXT STEPS: COLLABORATIONS FOR SHARED SOLUTIONS Page 186 VI. WORKING GROUP PROJECTS Page 190 VII. RESEARCH GAPS Page 191 VIII. CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES Page 192 PART 5: PHASE THREE LONG-TERM CARE FACILITIES Chapter 8: Long-Term Care Facilities I. INTRODUCTION Page 194 II. DESCRIPTIONS OF LONG-TERM CARE SETTINGS Page 196 III. STATUS OF HAIS AND INFECTION CONTROL IN LONG-TERM CARE Page 199 IV. HHS DATA SOURCES AND PROJECTS ON REDUCING AND PREVENTING HAIS IN LTCFS Page 206 V. METRICS AND EVALUATION Page 210 VI. PROMISING PRACTICES IN INFECTION CONTROL IN LTCFS Page 216 VII. FEDERAL REGULATORY OVERSIGHT AND PERFORMANCE INCENTIVE PROGRAMS IN NHS/SNFS Page 220 VIII. COMMUNICATIONS AND OUTREACH TO THE LONG-TERM CARE COMMUNITY IX. NEXT STEPS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS Table 11. Summary of Recommendations Appendix A. Settings of Long-Term Care Appendix B. Current HHS Projects and Programs for Reporting of Health Care-Associated Infections in the Long-Term Care Setting Appendix C. Examples of CDC-Supported State HAI Prevention Activities Engaging LTCFs Page 223 Page 224 Page 225 Page 227 Page 229 Page 230 iii
6 Appendix D-1. Existing Communication Outlets and Identified Target Audiences Appendix D-2. Health Care Safety and Quality Campaigns Page 231 Page 237 PART 6: CONCLUSION Chapter 9: Conclusion I. COORDINATION OF EFFORTS II. CONCLUSION Page 240 Page 241 iv
7 KEY ACRONYMS ACO: Accountable care organization AO: Accreditation Organization ARRA: American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 ASCs: Ambulatory Surgical Centers CAUTI: Catheter-associated urinary tract infection CDI: Clostridium difficile infections CLABSI: Central-line associated bloodstream infections CfC: Conditions for Coverage CoP: Condition of Participation CUSP: Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program EHR: Electronic health record ESRD: End-Stage Renal Disease FHISE: Federal Health Information Sharing Environment HAC-POA: Hospital-Acquired Conditions- Present on Admission HAI: Health care-associated infections HCP: Health Care Personnel HICPAC: Health Care Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee HITECH: Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health HVBP: Hospital Value-based Purchasing (also VBP) ICU: Intensive care unit ICWS: Infection Control Worksheet IPPS: Inpatient Prospective Payment System IT: Information Technology LTCFs: Long-term care facilities MDR: Multi-drug resistant MRSA: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus NHSN: National Healthcare Safety Network NwHIN: Nationwide Health Information Network PSO: Patient Safety Organization QIO: Quality Improvement Organization SCIP: Surgical Care Improvement Project SSA: State Survey Agencies SSI: Surgical site infections UTI: Urinary tract infection VAE: Ventilator-associated event VAP: Ventilator-associated pneumonia VBP: Value-based purchasing Acronyms for Federal Departments and Agencies AHRQ: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality ACL: Administration for Community Living CDC: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CMS: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services DOD: U.S. Department of Defense FDA: Food and Drug Administration GAO: Government Accountability Office HHS: U.S. Department of Health & Human Services HRSA: Health Resources and Services Administration IHS: Indian Health Service NIH: National Institutes of Health OS: HHS Office of the Secretary ASPE: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation OASH: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health NVPO: National Vaccine Program Office ODPHP: Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion ONC: Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology VA: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs v
8 I am pleased to share the National Action Plan to Prevent Health Care-Associated Infections: Road Map to Elimination (HAI Action Plan). Health care-associated infections (HAI) are a serious national health issue. At any given time, one in 20 hospitalized patients has an HAI, and more than one million HAIs occur every year, costing the U.S. health care system billions of dollars. The Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) encourages HAI reductions by engaging public and private sector stakeholders. The HAI Action Plan reflects a significant update and expansion from the initial version issued in It includes new sections specific to infection reduction in ambulatory surgical centers, end-stage renal disease facilities, and long-term care facilities, as well as a section on increasing influenza vaccination of health care personnel. The HAI Action Plan reflects the work of many offices across HHS and the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs. The plan also reflects input from national experts and stakeholder organizations. Achieving the highest quality health care at an affordable cost is a complex endeavor. It requires providers, health care organizations, governments, the public health community, patients, and their loved ones to collaborate and support each other s actions to realize our shared mission of being the healthiest society we can be. Patients across the nation depend on our efforts to prevent and eventually eliminate HAIs. The HAI Action Plan is critical to our overall mission to strengthen health systems by improving health-care quality and patient safety. Recently, we have seen significant investments in the essential strategies and infrastructure needed to reduce the HAI burden. My vision is to contribute to an even stronger, healthier, and more prosperous America for years to come. The National Action Plan to Prevent Health Care-Associated Infections: Road Map to Elimination will help to achieve that vision. Sincerely, /Kathleen Sebelius/ //Kath Kathleen Sebelius
Message from the HHS Performance Improvement Officer The Department of Health and Human Services is outcome-oriented in the delivery and administration of health and human services. HHS staff, as well
Perspectives from the Field. Progress Toward Eliminating Healthcare-Associated Infections September 23-24, 2010 Arlington, VA
Perspectives from the Field Progress Toward Eliminating Healthcare-Associated Infections September 23-24, 2010 Arlington, VA Presentation Overview Linda Greene Association for Professionals in Infection