PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Who benefits from a catheter -- and who doesn't? New guide aims to protect patients

U-M team publishes appropriateness guide based on national expert review

2015-05-05
(Press-News.org) ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- What's the only thing worse than having a urinary catheter when you're in the hospital? Having one and getting a urinary tract infection (UTI) - or worse - as a result.

Now, a new detailed guide gives doctors and nurses information to help decide which hospital patients may benefit from a urinary catheter - and which ones don't.

And that should help spare patients the pain, embarrassment, and potentially serious side effects that can come with having a catheter placed -- which may bring more risk than benefit to the patient.

Called the Ann Arbor Criteria for Urinary Catheter Appropriateness, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine as a special supplement, this guideline provides far more detailed advice than ever before.

Many hospitals currently use a short list of appropriate and inappropriate urinary catheter uses published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2009.

Unlike the 2009 guideline, the new guideline includes criteria for choosing between three urinary catheter types: indwelling Foley catheters, which continuously drain the bladder, in-and-out catheters, and external "condom" catheters for men.

It also points to when non-catheter strategies may be better, and addresses common and practical bedside challenges that arise, such as managing incontinence in patients who are very difficult to turn.

"In general, because urinary catheters increase the patient's risk of infection and other complications such as pain and scarring of the urinary tract, they should only be used when teams have no other way to assess a patient's urine or his or her fluid status," says Jennifer Meddings, M.D., M.Sc., lead author of the paper and an assistant professor of internal medicine at the U-M Medical School.

One in five hospital patients receives a Foley catheter -- but the new Ann Arbor Criteria suggest that far fewer should.

For instance, the guide says that Foley catheters should not be placed routinely for all intensive care unit patients. Although many ICU patients need hourly urine volume measurement, which requires an indwelling catheter like a Foley, other patients could be managed with a different strategy. Or they could at least have the catheter removed sooner in their ICU stay, after stabilization. Each day of catheterization increases the risk of complications. So even one day less of catheter use could make the difference in protecting a patient against infection - especially because many UTIs acquired during hospitalization are resistant to antibiotics.

"Reducing the use of catheters, and the UTIs, bloodstream infections and urological emergencies that can arise from their use, could reduce hospital costs," says co-author and longtime urinary catheter researcher Sanjay Saint, M.D., M.P.H., Chief of Medicine at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System and the George Dock professor of internal medicine at the U-M Medical School.

He points to results from an effort that has involved half of all hospitals in the state of Michigan, run by the Keystone Center for Patient Safety. Through a number of catheter-related tactics, it reduces catheter use and catheter-associated UTIs by 25 percent - during a time when rates in other states decreased far more slowly despite federal-level efforts to drive them down.

Now, that same approach - called the "Bladder Bundle" -- is being used in nearly 1,000 hospitals nationwide as part of the "On the CUSP: Stop CAUTI" initiative sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Soon, those hospitals will begin using the Ann Arbor Criteria to guide their catheter use.

Saint and Meddings, and their U-M and VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System colleagues, also run a website called CatheterOut.org that offers free information and resources for hospital teams on all aspects of catheter use. The new criteria will be available there as well.

"Our past research has shown that a third to a half of the days that patients have indwelling catheters are unnecessary." says Saint. "We would very much like these new criteria to be used nationwide by every care team, to determine when a Foley catheter is appropriate."

Unlike prior catheter guidelines, this guideline was developed using a rigorous approach called the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method. It began with a systematic literature review to tally the evidence of benefits and risks of urinary catheters, which yielded 17 guidelines and 79 studies.

Then 15 experts, including nurses and physicians from multiple specialties and eight institutions, met in Ann Arbor to rate the appropriateness of the three catheter types for more than 100 clinical scenarios for medical (non-surgical) uses. They 'pressure tested' each clinical scenario, comparing the risks and benefits of catheterization for specific types of patients. This allowed them to take into account patient-specific characteristics or challenges that previous guidelines did not include, and to identify catheter uses that are appropriate, inappropriate and where more research is needed.

"Although the criteria developed by this method are more complex and will be more challenging to implement and monitor, the complexity mirrors the hard decisions that clinicians are already making each day when deciding to place or remove Foley catheters," says Meddings.

An editorial being published with the paper by Carolyn V. Gould, M.D., MSCR notes, "Meddings and colleagues should be applauded for their efforts to refine the urinary catheter appropriateness criteria," especially when evidence is lacking for or against catheter use in many situations.

INFORMATION:

Authors: In addition to Meddings and Saint, the authors of the Ann Arbor Criteria paper are Karen E. Fowler, MPH; Elissa Gaies, MD, MPH; Andrew Hickner, MSI; Sarah L. Krein, PhD, RN; and Steven J. Bernstein MD, MPH. Most of the authors are members of the U-M Medical School Division of General Medicine faculty and VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System; Hickner is at the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Yale University. Meddings, Saint, Bernstein and Krein are members of the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation. Saint, Bernstein and Krein are also members of the VA Center for Clinical Management Research.

Funding: The study was supported by the Department of Veterans Affairs National Center for Patient Safety, Ann Arbor Patient Safety Center of Inquiry, and a contract with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, as well as AHRQ grant K08HS19767.

For information and resources on reducing catheter use: http://catheterout.org/ For information on the On the CUSP: Stop CAUTI initiative: http://www.onthecuspstophai.org/on-the-cuspstop-cauti/

Reference: Annals of Internal Medicine, Vol. 162 No. 9 (Supplement), 5 May 2015, http://annals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2280677 doi:10.7326/M14-1304



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

ASTRO issues guideline on definitive and adjuvant RT for locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer

2015-05-05
Fairfax, Va., May 5, 2015--The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) is issuing a new guideline, "Definitive and adjuvant radiotherapy in locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer: An American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) evidence-based clinical practice guideline." The guideline's executive summary is published in the May-June issue of Practical Radiation Oncology (PRO), ASTRO's clinical practice journal. The complete guideline, which cites 35 years of data to help guide current treatment and future research, is available online as an open-access ...

Just like humans, dolphins have social networks

Just like humans, dolphins have social networks
2015-05-05
They may not be on Facebook or Twitter, but dolphins do, in fact, form highly complex and dynamic networks of friends, according to a recent study by scientists at Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute (HBOI) at Florida Atlantic University. Dolphins are known for being highly social animals, and a team of researchers at HBOI took a closer look at the interactions between bottlenose dolphins in the Indian River Lagoon (IRL) and discovered how they mingle and with whom they spend their time. Through intensive photo-ID surveys conducted along the IRL, which were carried ...

U of T astrophysicists offer proof that famous image shows forming planets

U of T astrophysicists offer proof that famous image shows forming planets
2015-05-05
A recent and famous image from deep space marks the first time we've seen a forming planetary system, according to a study by U of T astrophysicists. The team, led by Daniel Tamayo from the Centre for Planetary Science at U of T Scarborough and the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics, found that circular gaps in a disk of dust and gas swirling around the young star HL Tau are in fact made by forming planets. "HL Tau likely represents the first image taken of the initial locations of planets during their formation," says Tamayo. "This could be an enormous ...

Childhood maltreatment linked to sleep problems among adult Canadians

2015-05-05
TORONTO, ON - Adults who experienced multiple incidents of childhood maltreatment were more than two times as likely to have trouble sleeping than their counterparts who were not maltreated during childhood, according to a new study from researchers at the University of Toronto, University of Ottawa, and Western University. The study appears online in the journal Sleep Medicine. "We found a significant association between childhood maltreatment and difficulty sleeping later in life," says lead author Philip Baiden, a PhD Student at the University of Toronto's Factor-Inwentash ...

Redesigned systems may increase access to MRI for patients with implanted medical devices

2015-05-05
New technology developed at the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) may extend the benefits of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to many patients whose access to MRI is currently limited. A redesign of the wire at the core of the leads that carry signals between implanted medical devices and their target structures significantly reduces the generation of heat that occurs when standard wires are exposed to the radiofrequency (RF) energy used in MRI. The novel system is described in a paper published in the online Nature journal Scientific ...

Improving organic transistors that drive flexible and conformable electronics

Improving organic transistors that drive flexible and conformable electronics
2015-05-05
AMHERST, Mass. -- A revolution is coming in flexible electronic technologies as cheaper, more flexible, organic transistors come on the scene to replace expensive, rigid, silicone-based semiconductors, but not enough is known about how bending in these new thin-film electronic devices will affect their performance, say materials scientists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Writing in the current issue of Nature Communications, polymer scientists Alejandro Briseño and Alfred Crosby at UMass Amherst, with their doctoral student Marcos Reyes-Martinez, now ...

Study finds positive effects of job corps participation

2015-05-05
ALEXANDRIA, VA, MAY 5, 2015 -- A statistical analysis of Job Corps data strongly suggests positive average effects on wages for individuals who participated in the federal job-training program. Results of the analysis recently were included in an article in the Journal of Business & Economic Statistics (http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ubes20/current), a professional journal published by the American Statistical Association . The study was conducted by Xuan Chen of Renmin University of China and Carlos A. Flores of California Polytechnic State University. Job Corps is ...

Interferon-free therapy clears hepatitis C in 93 percent of patients in trial

2015-05-05
DURHAM, N.C. -- A 12-week dose of an investigational three-drug hepatitis C combination cleared the virus in 93 percent of patients with liver cirrhosis who hadn't previously been treated, according to a study in the May 5, 2015, issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association. Bristol-Myers Squibb funded the trial of the combination of three drugs -- daclatasvir, asunaprevir, and beclabuvir. None of the three drugs are FDA-approved, but daclatasvir is currently under review by the FDA. Duke Medicine researchers collaborated on the design and analysis of the ...

Studies show effectiveness of combo treatment for HCV patients with, without cirrhosis

2015-05-05
In two studies appearing in the May 5 issue of JAMA, patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1 infection and with or without cirrhosis achieved high rates of sustained virologic response after 12 weeks of treatment with a combination of the direct-acting-antiviral drugs daclatasvir, asunaprevir, and beclabuvir. Current estimates indicate that 130 million to 150 million people worldwide are chronically infected with HCV, resulting in up to 350,000 deaths per year. Of the 7 HCV genotypes identified, genotype 1 is the most prevalent worldwide, accounting for ...

Treatment reduces risk of recurrence of C. difficile infection

2015-05-05
Among patients with Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) who recovered following standard treatment with the antibiotics metronidazole or vancomycin, oral administration of spores of a strain of C difficile that does not produce toxins colonized the gastrointestinal tract and significantly reduced CDI recurrence, according to a study in the May 5 issue of JAMA. C difficile is the cause of one of the most common and deadly health care-associated infections, linked to 29,000 U.S. deaths each year. Rates of CDI remain at unprecedented high levels in U.S. hospitals. Clinical ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Clumps of this molecule inhibit strep’s DNA-cleaving enzymes

Cars as particles

Let widgeongrass be a weed in the seagrass yard -- making seagrass restoration more resistant to rising temperatures using generalist grasses

Group sales incentives boost weak brand sales, study finds

The double-fanged adolescence of saber-toothed cats

COVID-19-induced financial hardships reveal mental health struggles

Healthy lifestyle may offset effects of life-shortening genes by 60%+

Frequent teen vaping might boost risk of toxic lead and uranium exposure

Fentanyl inhalation may cause potentially irreversible brain damage, warn doctors

OHSU patient is world’s first documented case of brain disease from fentanyl inhalation

Microarray patches safe and effective for vaccinating children, trial shows

Montana State scientists’ research on RNA editing illuminates possible lifesaving treatments for genetic diseases

UC Irvine astronomers’ simulations support dark matter theory

Rensselaer researcher publishes groundbreaking study on labor market discrimination against transgender people

What's new in transportation data at PSU?

Ten-minute breath test to monitor antibiotic concentrations

Antimicrobial resistance prevalence varies by age and sex in bloodstream infections in European hospitals

Pathogens, including multi-drug resistant “superbugs”, found on floors, ceilings and door handles of hospital toilets, UK study finds

Sour Patch adults: 1 in 8 grown-ups love extreme tartness, study shows

Vineyard Cares Business of the Year presented to Huntsman Cancer Institute

Polyamorous youth report facing stigma, heightened levels of depression

Competition from “skinny label” generics saved Medicare billions

Xavier Ochsner College of Medicine announces founding dean and location in downtown New Orleans at Benson Tower

Three Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute faculty members honored by AAAS

STRONG STAR Consortium secures $17 million in DOD research funding for brain injuries, PTSD and more

Scientists harness the wind as a tool to move objects

Long snouts protect foxes when diving headfirst in snow

Laser imaging could offer early detection for at-risk artwork

"BioBlitz" citizen science reveals urban biodiversity, guides management

Haiti study suggests early-onset heart failure is prevalent form of heart disease in low-income countries

[Press-News.org] Who benefits from a catheter -- and who doesn't? New guide aims to protect patients
U-M team publishes appropriateness guide based on national expert review