Healthcare Hygiene magazine January 2020 | Page 14

monitored and measured, and what would be appropriate benchmarks for cleanliness and reduced risk for pathogen transmission? How should interventions be implemented, including in-depth study of facilitators and barriers to real-world implementation?” “In addition to expanding the use of comparative effectiveness research and placing greater emphasis on patient-centered outcomes, future research should investigate the effectiveness of a number of promising new technologies and approaches,” said Han. “These include self-disinfecting coatings and increasingly used surface markers for monitoring the presence of pathogens. Other challenges include identifying high-touch surfaces that confer the greatest risk of pathogen transmission and developing standard thresholds for defining cleanliness.” As Han, et al. (2015) note: “We found considerable di- versity regarding both study design and cleaning/disinfecting and monitoring methods examined across studies, as well as many limitations in the evidence base. There was a lack of direct, rigorous comparative studies of various methods, with only five studies designed as randomized, controlled trials. Our review of the literature also highlighted a limited focus on patient-centered outcomes, such as patient colonization or infection. Instead, surface contamination was the most commonly reported outcome.” The results of these studies suggest that evaluating the clinical effectiveness of cleaning and disinfecting methods is challenging. As the researchers explain, “A major limitation is the gap between optimized use of surface cleaning or disinfecting agents in studies and practical implementation in real-world settings (such as appropriate dwell time and type of surface targeted). Manufacturers provide recommendations for proper use of their products, but most studies do not report thoroughness of cleaning or adherence to disinfectant dwell time; this information also remains largely unknown in daily practice. An important related concern is uncertainty by end users about the applicability of some manufacturer recommendations. Guidance that accompanies products may be based on laboratory testing under ideal conditions rather than clinical settings. Recommendations may also be developed based on certain types of pathogens, but users may choose to implement a product or technology for broader effects. Few studies directly compared the effectiveness of different methods; instead, many used before-and-after study designs to assess the effect of a single disinfecting method.” Another challenge to interpreting the results of the current evidence base, according to Han, et al. (2015) is determining the specific effect of environmental cleaning and disinfecting interventions in the context of multicomponent infection prevention strategies: “Infection prevention comprises many critical components in addition to hard surface cleaning, including sterilization of instruments, implementation of appropriate isolation precautions, and proper hand hygiene. These and other elements may sometimes be included as interventions within a larger infection prevention strategy, limiting the ability to discern the specific effect of any single approach. These factors also have the potential to modify the effectiveness of environmental cleaning interventions. Considerable uncertainty also remains about which surfaces, including high-touch objects, should be targeted for cleaning and disinfecting.” 14 Four years after Han, et al. (2015)’s summation of the paltry evidence, Mitchell, et al. (2019) published their multicenter, randomized trial, known as the REACH study, evaluating the effectiveness of an environmental cleaning bundle to reduce HAIs in hospitals. The Researching Effective Approaches to Cleaning in Hospitals (REACH) study was a pragmatic trial conducted in 11 acute-care hospitals in Australia having more than 200 inpatient beds and a HAI surveillance program. The stepped-wedge design meant intervention periods varied from 20 weeks to 50 weeks. The researchers introduced the REACH cleaning bundle — a multimodal intervention, focusing on optimizing product use, technique, staff training, auditing with feedback, and communication — for routine cleaning. The primary outcomes were incidences of health-care-associated Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia, Clostridium difficile infection, and vancomycin-resistant enterococci infection. The secondary outcome was the thoroughness of cleaning of frequent touch points, assessed by a fluorescent marking gel. In the pre-intervention phase, the authors reported 230 cases of VRE infection, 362 of S. aureus bacteremia, and 968 C. difficile infections, for 3,534,439 occupied-bed days. During the intervention, there were 50 cases of VRE infection, 109 of S. aureus bacteremia, and 278 C. difficile infections, for 1,267,134 occupied-bed days. After the intervention, VRE infections reduced from 0.35 to 0.22 per 10,000 occupied-bed days, while the incidences of S. aureus bacteremia (0.97 to 0.80 per 10,000 occupied-bed-days) and C. difficile infections (2.34 to 2.52 per 10,000 occupied-bed days) did not change significantly. The intervention increased the percentage of frequent touch points cleaned in bathrooms from 55 percent to 76 percent and patient rooms from 64 percent to 86 percent. As Mitchell, et al. (2019) emphasize, “The intervention does not require new technology, but prioritizes evidence from previous studies based on feasibility and cost of implementation, using an implementation science framework to guide application. This bundle has the potential to be implemented into various hospital settings. The findings from our real-world study suggest that improving hospital cleaning requires a multi-modal, tailored approach that considers the local setting. By using a bundle approach to improve routine and discharge cleaning, improved cleaning performance and a reduction in the number of VRE infections is possible. Since VRE is a useful surrogate for other bacteria, there are potential benefits of a tailored cleaning bundle for other pathogens that survive in the environment. However, we found no effect of the cleaning bundle on Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia and Clostridium difficile.” The REACH bundle— created via a review of peer-re- viewed publications and guidelines, prioritization of evidence by an expert panel (with a focus on interventions that were easy to implement and low cost) —makes recommendations on optimal types of cleaning agents, frequency of cleaning, cleaning techniques, auditing strategies, environmental cleaning staff training, and creating a hospital-wide commitment to improved cleaning. Brett Mitchell, PhD, FACN, FACIPC, CIPC-E, a professor in the School of Nursing and Midwifery, at the University of Newcastle in Australia, lead author of the study, explains that, january 2020 • www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com