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Breast Surgery

Tuesday 17 March 2009

The electronic medical record as a tool for infection surveillance: Successful automation of device-days.

Am J Infect Control. 2009 Mar 6. [Epub ahead of print] LinkOut

The electronic medical record as a tool for infection surveillance: Successful automation of device-days.
Wright MO, Fisher A, John M, Reynolds K, Peterson LR, Robicsek A.
Department of Infection Control, NorthShore University HealthSystem, Evanston, IL.

BACKGROUND: Manual collection of central venous catheter, ventilator, and indwelling urinary catheter device-days is time-consuming, often restricted to intensive care units (ICU) and prone to error.

METHODS: We describe the use of an electronic medical record to extract existing clinical documentation of invasive devices. This allowed automated device-days calculations for device-associated infection surveillance in an acute care setting.

RESULTS: The automated system had high sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values (>0.90) compared with chart review. The system is not restricted to ICUs and reduces surveillance efforts by a conservative estimate of over 3.5 work-weeks per year in our setting. Eighty percent of urinary catheter days and 50% of central venous catheter-days occurred outside the ICU.

CONCLUSION: Device-days may be automatically extracted from an existing electronic medical record with a higher degree of accuracy than manual collection while saving valuable personnel resources.PMID: 19269712 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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