Sepsis Clinical Trial
Official title:
The 'Bekele Afessa Scan-Teach-Treat Approach' to Improve Care of Patients With Acute Infection at the Gitwe Hospital in Gitwe/Rwanda
Infection and sepsis are among the leading causes of death worldwide, particularly in middle- and low-income countries.The Surviving Sepsis Campaign has launched an initiative to improve sepsis care in resource-limited settings by employing the 'Scan-Teach-Treat' Approach. In this prospective before-after study, three interventions will be performed: First four months period: collection of baseline data on the clinical management of patients with acute infection. Second four months period: During the first days, a 1.5-day focused training program will be performed (participants: health care workers of primary care facilities within the catchment area of the Gitwe hospital and health care workers of the Gitwe hospital). Then, a simple management protocol to care for patients with an acute infection will be implemented into clinical practice. During the third four months period, a 'Sepsis First Aid' kit containing essential resources to treat patients with an acute infection (antimicrobials, fluids, data documentation sheet) will be distributed to primary care facilities and the emergency department of the Gitwe hospital. During the 8 months following the focused training program (periods 2 and 3), data collection will continue. It is hypothesized that implementation of a simple clinical management protocol and exposure of health care workers in the Gitwe Hospital area to a focused training program on the management of acute infections will increase the rate of evidence-based interventions performed in patients with an acute infection during the first six hours after hospital admission (administration of oxygen and fluids whenever indicated, timely administration of antimicrobial drugs, source control measures).
Infection and sepsis are among the leading causes of death worldwide. The annual burden of
infectious diseases is particularly high in middle- and low-income countries. The Surviving
Sepsis Campaign released guidelines for severe sepsis and septic shock management, whose
implementation improved sepsis outcomes. Despite these benefits, the Surviving Sepsis
Campaign cannot be implemented in middle- or low-income countries due to lack of training
and resources. This leaves those clinicians caring for the worldwide majority of patients
suffering from acute infection without standardized and adoptable guidance for sepsis. The
Surviving Sepsis Campaign has launched an initiative to improve sepsis care in
resource-limited settings by employing the 'Scan-Teach-Treat' Approach. This approach
consists of the following three steps: Step 1 - scanning the region of interest for key
elements of regional epidemiology of acute infectious diseases as well as elements of the
teach and treat module; Step 2 - implementing a focused training program on the management
of acute infectious diseases; Step 3 - implementing a 'Sepsis First Aid kit' into clinical
practice.
In this prospective before-after study, this approach will be piloted at the Gitwe Distict
Hospital in Gitwe, rural Rwanda. During three four month periods, three interventions are
planned: First four months period: collection of baseline data on the clinical management of
patients with acute infection. Second four months period: During the first days, a 1.5-day
focused training program will be performed (participants: health care workers of primary
care facilities within the catchment area of the Gitwe hospital and health care workers of
the Gitwe hospital). Then, a simple management protocol to care for patients with an acute
infection will be implemented into clinical practice. During the third four months period, a
'Sepsis First Aid' kit containing essential resources to treat patients with an acute
infection (antimicrobials, fluids, data documentation sheet) will be distributed to primary
care facilities and the emergency department of the Gitwe hospital. During the 8 months
following the focused training program (periods 2 and 3), data collection will continue. It
is hypothesized that implementation of a simple clinical management protocol and exposure of
health care workers in the Gitwe Hospital area to a focused training program on the
management of acute infections will increase the rate of evidence-based interventions
performed in patients with an acute infection during the first six hours after hospital
admission (administration of oxygen and fluids whenever indicated, timely administration of
antimicrobial drugs, source control measures). In addition to the main analysis, study
endpoints will be analyzed separately for the following á priori defined sub-groups:
children (<15 years); patients with malaria; patients positive for HIV; patients referred to
from primary health care centers.
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