The Incidence of Ventilator-associated Pneumonia and Rate of Compliance With Survey Criteria Clinical Trial
Official title:
Investigation of Compliance With Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Prevention Methods and Incidence of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia in Intensive Care Units
Ventilator-associated Pneumonia (VAP) is a high-mortality hospital infection that occurs in patients undergoing invasive Mechanical Ventilation (MV) and is frequently encountered in intensive care units. Prolonged mechanical ventilation, prolonged hospitalizations, excessive use of antibiotics and increased medical costs are seen. Therefore, compliance with ventilator-associated pneumonia prevention methods is becoming increasingly important. Therefore, in the investigator's study was to investigate compliance with ventilator-associated pneumonia prevention methods and the incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia in intensive care units.
In the first stage of the study, Diskapi Yildirim Beyazit Education and Research Hospital
Anesthesia Reanimation 1-2-3-4, compliance with ventilator-associated pneumonia prevention
rules in neurology, neurosurgery, and internal medicine intensive care units will be
investigated. The researcher will visit the intensive care units included in the study twice
a day (10:00 and 14:00) by Dr. Gökhan Erdem for 1 week at the same time of day and monitor
whether they work in accordance with VAP prevention rules.
VAP prevention methods: Head angle 30-45 degrees, peptic ulcer prophylaxis, thromboembolism
prophylaxis, daily wake up test, use of chlorhexidine in oral care, bacterial filter use in
ventilator circuit, daily spontaneous breathing trials, silver-coated endotracheal tube use,
cuff pressure adequacy, hand hygiene , VAP nurse training, avoiding excessive distension of
the stomach, equipment contamination, mechanical tooth cleaning, daily assessment for patient
separation from mechanical ventilation, sterile aspiration technique, use of sterile gloves
before aspiration, aspiration of subglottic secretions will be recorded.
In the second stage of the study, Diskapi Yildirim Beyazit Education and Research Hospital
anesthesia reanimation 1-2-3-4, demographic characteristics of all hospitalized patients for
neurological, neurosurgery, and internal medicine intensive care units, reason for
hospitalization in intensive care unit, APACHE score, duration of mechanical ventilation,
length of stay in ICU unit, blood transfusion, urinary infection, wound infection, presence
of infection in at least one site, duration and type of surgery if operated, post-op
prophylactic antibiotic use, history of CPR, history of difficult intubation, shape and
duration of intubation, presence of tracheostomy , time from intubation to tracheostomy
opening, residence time in ICU, change of filters in mechanical ventilator circuits,
antibiotic use, low serum albumin value, sedative use, steroid use, feeding type, inotropic
requirement, prokinetic agent use, number of bed personnel and nurses, reentubation history,
transport history, glaskow coma score, frequency of endotracheal aspiration, peep need,
smoking history, nasogastric use, chest tube, central venous catheter, presence of arterial
catheter, history of dialysis, continuous infusion therapy, aerosol therapy, chronic diseases
will be recorded. Patients under 18 years of age who had previously been diagnosed with
pneumonia, lung expansion devices such as cpap, nasal peep, hypocpap were not applied via
tracheostomy or endotracheal intubation, and patients due to high frequency ventilation or
extracorporeal life support were excluded from VAP surveillance.
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