BACKGROUND: The best approach to measurement of health care-associated infection rates is controversial.
METHODS: We compared 3 metrics to identify catheter-associated bloodstream infection (CA-BSI), catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CA-UTI), and ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) in 8 intensive care units during 2009. We evaluated traditional surveillance using National Healthcare Safety Network methodology, data mining with MedMined Data Mining Surveillance (CareFusion Corporation, San Diego, CA), and administrative coding with ICD-9-CM.
RESULTS: A total of 65 CA-BSI, 28 CA-UTI, and 48 VAP was identified. Traditional surveillance detected 58 CA-BSI and no false positives; data mining identified 51 cases but 51 false positives; administrative coding documented 6 cases and 6 false positives. Traditional surveillance detected 27 CA-UTI and no false positives; data mining identified 17 cases but 19 false positives; administrative coding documented 3 cases and 1 false-positive. Traditional surveillance detected 41 VAP and no false positives; data mining identified 26 cases but also 79 false positives; administrative coding found 17 cases and 13 false positives. Overall sensitivities were as follows: traditional surveillance, 0.84; data mining, 0.67; administrative coding, 0.18. Positive predictive values were as follows: traditional surveillance, 1.0; data mining, 0.39; administrative coding, 0.57.
CONCLUSION: Traditional surveillance proved superior in terms of sensitivity, positive predictive value, and rate estimation.
Written by:
Stamm AM, Bettacchi CJ Are you the author?
Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL
Reference: Am J Infect Control. 2012 Jun 20
PubMed Abstract
PMID: 22727246