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Life After Sepsis: Post-Sepsis Syndrome Sepsis Virtual Event July 6, 2017 12:00 – 1:00 p.m. CT 1

Life After Sepsis: Post-Sepsis Syndrome · How Did You Hear About Today’s Virtual Event? A) HRET HIIN flyer B) HRET HIIN website C) HRET LISTSERV D) State hospital association

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Life After Sepsis:Post-Sepsis Syndrome

Sepsis Virtual Event July 6, 2017

12:00 – 1:00 p.m. CT

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WELCOME AND INTRODUCTIONSMallory Bender, LCSW| Program Manager, HRET

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Today’s Agenda

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Today’s presentation

Download slides/resources Register for upcoming events

Chat with participants

WEBINAR PLATFORM QUICK REFERENCE

How Did You Hear About Today’s Virtual Event?

A) HRET HIIN flyerB) HRET HIIN websiteC) HRET LISTSERV D) State hospital associationE) QIN-QIO F) Your organization/colleagueG) Other, please specify.

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Data Updates

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Post-Sepsis Care Syndrome-Surviving Sepsis is Just the

Beginning

Elizabeth Scruth PhD MPH RN CCNS CCRN FCCMClinical Practice Consultant

Clinical Effectiveness Team- Quality DivisionKaiser Permanente NCAL

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Objectives

• Describe the sequelae most common in sepsis survivors

• Identify risk factors that contribute to post sepsis care syndrome

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Background

• Sepsis is an increasing burden in the USA• Sepsis management has led to decreased

mortality rates • Increased number of survivors• Little known about survivors of sepsis• Sepsis survivors have increased healthcare

utilization post survival• Ongoing mortality up to 2 years post sepsis

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Sun, et al. Critical Care Medicine. 2016: Dick, Liu, Zwanziger et al.BMC Health Services Research. 2012

• Sepsis survivors – increased healthcare usage in the first year

• Increased 30 day readmission rates– RBC transfusion, TPN and longer duration of

antibiotics ( main risk factors)– Insurance status, hospitalizations in prior year,

length of stay– Study showed 50% of the readmissions –

unresolved or recurrent infections

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Sun et al. Crit Care Med. 2016

• Long term care admissions and home healthcare– Two times more likely to be admitted to SNF in the

five years after a sepsis admission

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Dick et al. BMC Health Services Research. 2012

Beneath Our Understanding of Sepsis

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Sepsis and Chronic Health

• Chronic conditions increase risk of sepsis• Most common infectious disease of

hospitalization – pneumonia leading to severe sepsis

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Chronic Health Conditions Diabetes

Heart failure

Cardiovascular disease

Reduced lung function-severe

Cognitive impairments

Chronic kidney disease

Yende, Iwashyna, Angus. Trends Mol Med. 2015

• Severe reduction in lung function and or diabetes increases risk of pneumonia by over six fold- common cause of severe sepsis

• Unmeasured subclinical changes thought to play a role– Circulating interleukin (IL)- 6, tumor necrosis

factor ( TNF) and C-reactive protein ( CRP)

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Yende, Iwashyna, Angus., Trends Mol Med, 2015

The Sequelae of Sepsis

• Severe sepsis/septic shock worsens– Cognitive function– Physical impairment– Chronic kidney disease– Cardiovascular disease– Sleep patterns ( Common up to one year after

sepsis)May persist for several years and accelerate

underlying chronic diseases

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Shah et al. Am J Resp Crit Care Med.2013; Wunsch et al. JAMA. 2010: Iwashyna et al. JAMA. 2010: Altman et al. Ann Amer Thorac Soc. 2017

• During the sepsis event the following may affect the long term recovery:– Interventions- medications, early rehabilitation– Immobilization– Delirium– Depression/anxiety– Magnitude of host immune response

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Shah et al. Am J Resp Crit Care Med. 2013; Kellum et al. Arch Intern Med. 2007; Wunsch et al. JAMA. 2010

Impaired Immune Response• Septic shock- tissue damage• Preserving organ function during sepsis- effect

on chronic health- complex• Impaired immune response from sepsis-

deaths up to 1 year post index event• Sepsis survivors- more susceptible to

infections reducing their quality of life (herpes zoster, lower airway infections)

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Medzhitov et al. Science. 2012; Kellum et al. Arch Intern Med. 2007; Arens et al. Critical Care. 2016

Social and Environmental Factors

• Both influence the development of severe sepsis and its outcomes

• Race and marital status• Exposure to infection and health behaviors• Health systems and family environment

– restoration of function– family involvement/equipment needed

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Cox et al. Intensive Care Med. 2012

Preventing Sequelae from Sepsis?

We know how to prevent mortality-but what about mitigating morbidity in sepsis?

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• Our actions/inactions/delays – have long-term effects on the lives of our patients

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Next Steps for Patients with Post Sepsis Syndrome

Suzie Fletcher BSN, RN, CMSRNSepsis CoordinatorWesley Healthcare

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ABOUT US

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Wesley HealthcareWichita, Kansas

• Tertiary hospital licensed for 850 beds• Teaching Hospital• Children’s Hospital• Women’s Hospital• Over 500 babies delivered per month• Smaller 85 bed hospital (Wesley Woodlawn Hospital and ER)• 3 Emergency departments• Pediatric emergency department• 2 free standing emergency departments

Post- Discharge Clinic Planning

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• Need for clinic 30 for days post-discharge transitional care

• Health Promotion Model (Kessler, Renggli, & Swiss Centre for International Health, 2011)

• Almost 20 percent of all Medicare patients are readmitted within 30 days (Alper, O’Malley, and Greenwald, 2017)

• The cost of unplanned readmissions is 15 to 20 billion dollars annually (Beresford, 2011)

• Reduction in readmits• Reduction in mortalities

Post- Discharge Clinic Planning

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• Resources for:o

o

o

o

Assessment of current medical status

Medication review and education

Disease management education

Focus on social environment and other non-medical issues

Next Steps

• Resources• Data gathering• Finance• Written Proposal• ?

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Contact Information

Suzie Fletcher BSN, RN, CMSRNSepsis Coordinator

Wesley Medical Center550 N. Hillside

Wichita, Kansas 67214Phone: (316) 962-7007

Cell: (316) 765-2071Fax: (316) 962-7467

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References

Alper, E., O’Malley, T.A., & Greenwald, J. (2017, April 3). Hospital discharge and readmission. Beresford, L. (2011, December). Is a post-discharge clinic in your hospital’s future? The

Hospitalist Retrieved from http://www.the-hospitalist.org/hospitalist/article/124553/qi-initiatives/post-discharge-clinic-your-hospitals-future

Kessler, C., Renggli, V., & Swiss Centre for International Health. (2011, March 21). Health promotion: Concepts and practices. Retrieved from https://www.google.com/search?q=swiss+center+for+international+health+health+promotion+model&rlz=1C1GGRV_enUS751US751&oq=swiss+center+for+international+health+health+promotion+model&aqs=chrome..69i57.16959j0j9&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

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Its Not Just About Mortality

Tools for Prevention & RecognitionMaryanne Whitney

Steve Tremain

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• Our actions/inactions/delays – have long-term effects on the lives of our patients

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Back to Basics• Early Recognition

– Screening all ED patients at triage – Screening all seriously ill inpatient– Use BPA’s

• Create action with a (+) sepsis screen– Alerts, rapid response teams

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Decrease Morbidity & Mortality

• Treat with urgency– Blood cultures and lactate– Antibiotics within the “golden hour”– Fluid 30ml/kg for patients who are hypotensive of

lactate >4mmol/L

• Early source identification and control

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Resources

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http://www.sepsis.org/files/SA_Infographic1_Square3_8.5x11_PrintReady.pdf

36http://www.sepsis.org/files/sig/lifeaftersepsis.pdf

Open the Lines• Let’s hear from you!

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Bring It Home

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Mallory Bender, Program Manager, HRET

THANK YOU!

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