학술논문

Benchmarking blood culture quality in the emergency department: Contamination, single sets and positivity.
Document Type
Article
Source
Emergency Medicine Australasia. Apr2024, Vol. 36 Issue 2, p206-212. 7p.
Subject
*BACTEREMIA diagnosis
*BLOOD
*RISK assessment
*MICROBIAL contamination
*MICROBIAL sensitivity tests
*BENCHMARKING (Management)
*SCIENTIFIC observation
*SEX distribution
*HOSPITAL emergency services
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*DIAGNOSTIC errors
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*TERTIARY care
*AGE distribution
*RELATIVE medical risk
*CELL culture
*FUNGEMIA
*DATA analysis software
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics)
*MEDICAL triage
*REGRESSION analysis
*GRAM-negative bacteria
*GRAM-positive bacteria
Language
ISSN
1742-6731
Abstract
Objective: To benchmark blood culture (BC) quality in an Australian ED, explore groups at risk of suboptimal BC collection, and identify potential areas for improvement. Methods: This retrospective observational study was undertaken to benchmark quality of BCs in a tertiary adult ED in terms of number of BC sets per patient and proportion of patients with false positive (contaminated) BC results. Results: A single BC set was taken for 55% of patients, with lower acuity patients being more likely to have a single BC set taken. BC false positives occurred in 3.4% of presentations, with higher frequency in some critically unwell patient groups. The true positive BC rate was 10.9%, with pathogens most frequently isolated in older patients, those with a haematological condition or genitourinary source, and those admitted to inpatient wards. Hospital length of stay did not differ between patients with negative and patients with false positive BCs. Conclusions: BC quality standards in the ED such as false positive rate <3% and single culture rate <20% are required to facilitate benchmarking and prospective quality improvement. The sensitivity and specificity of this common and critical test can be improved. Patient subgroups associated with poor‐quality BC collection can be identified and should be a focus of future work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]