Surveillance Flashcards

1
Q

Surveillance systems should support a system that can identify risk factors for infection and other adverse advents, implement risk-reduction measures and monitor the effectiveness of interventions.

A

Programs should be integrated to include IPAC, performance improvement, patient safety, emergency preparedness, and public health activities.

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2
Q

Surveillance can be defined as a comprehensive method of measuring outcomes and related processes of care, analyzing the data, and providing information to members of the healthcare teams to assist in improving those outcomes.

A
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3
Q

Sensitivity

A

the ability of a test, case definition, or surveillance system to identify true cases or persons who have the health condition of interest. the proportion of persons with a health condition correctly identified by a a test or case definition as having the health condition.

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4
Q

Specificity

A

the ability of a test, case definition or surveillance system to exclude persons who do not have the health condition of interest.

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5
Q

validity

A

degree of measurement, test, study or other data collection method actually measures or detects what is intended to measure.

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6
Q

Ratios

A

A ratio can be used to express a relationship between two independent groups.

Numerator (device Days) are independent of denominator (patient-days)

eg: Ratio of male to female VAC cases in ICU
(X/Y) x 10 n. 4/2 x1.

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7
Q

Proprotion

A

A ratio in which the population in the numerator is a subset of the population in the denominator. Frequently expressed as a percentage.

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8
Q

Incidence Rate

A

Measures the occurrence of new cases or events in a specific population during a given time period.
x/y x 10n

X (numerator) is the number of new cases or events in a population during that time.
Y (denominator) is the number of in the population at risk during that time.

Denominator differs depending on the study being conducted.

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9
Q

In person-time incidence rates, the denominator is the sum of the time each person was at risk in a specified time period, totaled for all persons.

A
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10
Q

Attack rate- is actually an incidence proportion rather than a true rate, used to describe the frequency of cases during an outbreak.

A

eg. 11 of 46 people at the picnic developed GI.

11/46 x 100= 23.9%

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11
Q

Prevalence Measures

A

Occurrence of existing (old and new) in a specific population during a given time period.

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12
Q

Measures of central tendency

Mean
Median

A

Mean: mathematical average. affected by outliers
Median: middle value in a ranked set of data- not impacted by outliers

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13
Q

Range

A

difference between smallest and largest

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14
Q

Deviation

A

difference between individual value in a data set and the mean

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15
Q

Variance

A

deviation around the mean of a distribution

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16
Q

Standard deviation

A

reflects the distribution of values around the mean

17
Q

Percentiles

A

CDC NHSN reports percentile distributions for device associated infection rates and device utilization ratios among participating facilities.

18
Q

Methodology
Total (or Whole) House Surveillance

A

When total house surveillance is conducted, and overall facility infection rate should not be calculated. Rates should be calculated for specific HAIs in defined populations in the facility. CLABSIs in an ICU or SSIs related to a specific operative procedure.

Overall all, crude rates, are sensitive enough to identify potential problems and therefore cannot be used to target performance improvement activities.

Rates not adjusted for specific infection or injury risk., not appropriate for making comparisons over time, between groups either within a facility or between facilities, or benchmarking.

19
Q

Target surveillance- focuses on particular care units, infections related to medical devices, invasive procedures, and organisms of epidemiological significance.

A

Usually focuses on high-risk, high-volume procedures and those HAIs and adverse outcomes that are potentially preventable.

20
Q

TAP reports include the metric, CAD cumulative attributable difference, which yields a specific number of infections that must be prevented in order to reach established HAI reduction goals.

A

CDC encourages IP to utilize specific TAP reports and CAD metric that represent concrete prevention goals that are linked to standardized infection rates (SIR).

21
Q

Elements of an effective surveillance program

A

Select the surveillance methodology
Assess and define the population to be studied
Choose the events to monitor - outcomes of healthcare, processes of healthcare, selected events of importance to the organization.
Determine the time period
Identify surveillance criteria (case definitions)
Identify data elements to be collected
Determine methods for data analysis
Determine methods for data collection and management
Design an interpretive Surveillance Report
Identify recipients of the surveillance report
Develop a written surveillance plan
Surveillance program evaluation

22
Q

If rates are to be calculated, both the number of cases and the number in the total population at risk for that condition must be identifiable.

A

Rates rather than raw numbers must be used to accurately track trends over time. Select events that incorporate a risk adjustment or risk stratification method whenever possible.

23
Q

Identify data elements to be collected

A

To use time and personnel resources efficiently, data collection should be limited only to those elements that are needed to identify a case and determine whether the case criteria are met for the condition or event being studied.

24
Q

Determine methods for data analysis

A

Whenever possible, data should be expressed as rates or ratios that are calculated using the same methodology as a nationally validated surveillance system.

This allows an organization to compare its rates with another organization or a recognized benchmark.

25
Q

Determine methods for data collection and management

A

Data may be collected concurrently or retrospectively

Whenever possible, arrange to have data downloaded directly into a computerized surveillance database so they can be efficiently manipulated and analyzed.

26
Q

Design an interpretive Surveillance Report

A

Use surveillance findings to stimulate performance improvement activities.

27
Q

Identify the recipients of the surveillance report

A

Disseminate the report to those managers and healthcare providers in the organization that can use the findings to identify and implement evidence-based IPAC practices and improve outcomes.

28
Q

Surveillance Program Evaluation

A

Compare the program’s structure and activities with current evidence-based practices and published recommendations for surveillance programs in similar settings.

A surveillance program should be able to support a system that can prevent as many infections and other adverse events as possible with the resources available.

29
Q

If a hospital uses NHSN methodology to collect and analyze SSIs, then it can use the z-test and standardized infection ratio (SIR) to compare its risk-adjusted SSI rates with the rates in the NHSN system reports.

A
30
Q

National surveillance system for health care workers monitors for:

A

immunization, TST programs, exposures to blood and body fluids, vaccine preventable disease and TB.

31
Q

National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance System for HAI monitors infection-related events that include CLABSI, CAUTI, SSI, Ventilator-associated events, CDI, other drug resistant infections.

A
32
Q

Pathogens that have been linked to transmission via contaminated environmental surfaces and medical equipment include MRSA, VRE, CDI, pseudomonas aeruginosa, acinetobacter spp. norovirus.

A
33
Q

Active surveillance Testing= AST

The primary goal of public reporting is to increase the quality of healthcare processes and outcomes.

A