CRNAs Focus on Staff Wellness and Patient Safety
The American Association of Nurse Anesthesiology (AANA) has joined the ALL IN: Wellbeing First for Healthcare coalition, saying the group’s initiative to improve the...
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By: Karin Underberg
Published: 7/14/2020
Reports emerged six years ago about fatal outbreaks of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in patients who underwent endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP). In response, the CDC provided guidance on how to set up an Interim Duodenoscope Surveillance Protocol (IDSP), which involves culturing the scopes for residual pathogens. We adapted the protocol to fit our facility's capabilities and came up with a program to ensure these difficult-to-clean devices are properly cared for and closely monitored. Here are its key elements:
You should also develop a premature release and tracking protocol for emergency use. Thanks to our logs, we could easily track scopes prematurely removed from quarantine. For example, cultures for scopes used on Monday morning and cultured that afternoon aren't back until Wednesday or Thursday. But if an emergency case requires use of that scope on Tuesday, and the cultures taken Monday subsequently come back "unacceptable," we'd easily be able to inform both the Monday patient and the Tuesday emergency patient of possible exposure. Fortunately, we've never had an instance where a scope pulled out of quarantine came back "unacceptable."
Very low numbers of low concerning organisms are considered "acceptable." Remember, you're not sterilizing scopes. You're high-level disinfecting them, so you can't expect a totally negative culture. Unacceptable culture results require scope recleaning, reculturing and a return to quarantine pending results of the second culture.
We were forced to choose between the manufacturer-recommended brush or continuing to use cytology brushes because they come sterile and are smaller in diameter. We chose the latter. It was the best option we had.
While deciding between the brush options, we made another discovery. A new proceduralist wanted to use endoscopic ultrasound scopes, but the elevator mechanism in some models was similarly designed to that in our duodenoscopes, making them more challenging to clean. We therefore applied our duodenoscope culturing process to the endoscopic ultrasound scope. That was a proactive step on our part.
We've never had any trouble with infections from duodenoscopes — most likely because we're constantly refining our cleaning processes based on the latest data and guidelines, as well as our own experiences. OSM
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