Study: Majority of CLABSIs in Teaching Hospitals

Substantial progress has been made in the U.S. in reducing the occurrence of central line-associated bloodstream infections in critical care neonatal patients over the past two decades, though there is work to be done in some teaching hospitals, according to a study in Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology.

Researchers analyzed data on patient days for nearly all U.S. hospitals and CLABSI rates from the National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance and the National Healthcare Safety Network to estimate annual rates of CLABSI from 1990 to 2010.


There were an estimated 462,000 to 636,000 CLABSIs over the 20-year period. Rate reductions led to the prevention of between 104,000 and 198,000 CLABSIs during this period.

Researchers also found that 70 percent of CLABSI infections occurred in medium to large teaching hospitals, suggesting a targeted approach in reducing occurrences may be needed in these facilities.

More articles on CLABSIs:

Patient Safety Tool: Validation Toolkit for CLABSI Data Reported to CDC
Study: Combined Bottom-Up, Top-Down Approaches Reduce CLABSI Rate 92%
Neonatal ICU CLABSI Rates Drop by 58% in Less Than a Year, AHRQ Reports

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