McNally Edel, Krisciunas Gintas P, Langmore Susan E, Crimlisk Janet T, Pisegna Jessica M, Massaro Joseph
J Healthc Qual. 2019 Jan/Feb;41(1):1-9. doi: 10.1097/JHQ.0000000000000131.
Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) contributes greatly to patient mortality and healthcare costs. Studies have shown that aggressive oral care in intensive care units (ICUs) can significantly reduce pneumonia rates, and hospitals have implemented stringent protocols in this setting. However, little is known about the effectiveness of aggressive oral care in reducing HAP in non-intensive care wards, prompting us to conduct a nonrandomized controlled clinical trial. A structured toothbrushing program was provided to an experimental cohort of patients. A control group received usual care. Patient demographics, toothbrushing frequency, and pneumonia diagnosis were recorded over a 3.5-month period. Difference in pneumonia rates was computed using unadjusted and multivariate logistic regression analyses. No significant difference in pneumonia rates between control and experimental groups was found (1.7% versus 1.8%). Toothbrushing rates increased significantly in the experimental group (p = .002) but fell short of protocol frequency. It became apparent that aggressive toothbrushing program implementation requires nursing-led interdisciplinary involvement, more intensive training, a streamlined documentation system, and efficient compliance tracking. Lessons from this study should be used for future large-scale research. A secondary analysis of these data did, however, suggests that increasing toothbrushing rates may have the potential to reduce pneumonia in the non-ICU acute care setting.
医院获得性肺炎(HAP)对患者死亡率和医疗成本有很大影响。研究表明,在重症监护病房(ICU)进行积极的口腔护理可显著降低肺炎发生率,医院已在这种情况下实施了严格的方案。然而,对于积极的口腔护理在降低非重症监护病房HAP方面的效果知之甚少,这促使我们开展一项非随机对照临床试验。为一个实验组的患者提供了结构化刷牙方案。对照组接受常规护理。在3.5个月的时间里记录患者人口统计学信息、刷牙频率和肺炎诊断情况。使用未调整和多变量逻辑回归分析计算肺炎发生率的差异。对照组和实验组之间的肺炎发生率没有显著差异(1.7%对1.8%)。实验组的刷牙率显著提高(p = .002),但未达到方案频率。显然,实施积极的刷牙方案需要以护士为主导的多学科参与、更强化的培训、简化的记录系统以及有效的依从性跟踪。本研究的经验教训应用于未来的大规模研究。然而,对这些数据的二次分析确实表明,提高刷牙率可能有潜力降低非ICU急性护理环境中的肺炎发生率。