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Combined education and skin antisepsis intervention for persistently high blood-culture contamination rates in neonatal intensive care

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posted on 2023-02-22, 14:52 authored by Ciara O'Connor, Roy K. Philip, James Powell, Barbara L. Slevin, Catherine Quinn, Lorraine Power, Nuala H. O'Connell, Colum P. DunneColum P. Dunne
Contaminated blood cultures represent challenges regarding diagnosis, duration of hospitalization, antimicrobial use, pharmacy and laboratory costs. Facing problematic neonatal blood culture contamination (3.8%), we instigated a successful intervention combining skin antisepsis using sterile applicators with 2% chlorhexidine gluconate in 70% isopropanol prior to phlebotomy (replacing 70% isopropanol) and staff education. In the six months prior to intervention, 364 neonatal peripheral blood samples were collected. Fourteen (3.8%) were contaminated. In the post-intervention six months, 314 samples were collected. Three (0.96%) were contaminated, representing significant improvement (Fisher’s exact test: P= 0.0259). No dermatological sequelae were observed. The improvement has been sustained.

History

Publication

Journal of Hospital Infection;93, (1), pp. 105-107

Publisher

Elsevier

Note

peer-reviewed

Rights

This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Journal of Hospital Infecton. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in Journal of Hospital Infection, 93 (1), pp. 105-107, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhin.2016.01.011

Language

English

Also affiliated with

  • 4i - Centre for Interventions in Infection, Inflammation & Immunity

Department or School

  • School of Medicine

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