Antimicrobial Resistance Fighter Coalition - SHEA Guidelines

Prevention of HAIs

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Intervention • Use noninvasive positive pressure ventilation in selected populations (I) • Manage patients without sedation whenever possible (II) • Interrupt sedation daily (I) • Assess readiness to extubate daily (I) • Perform spontaneous breathing trials with sedatives turned off (I) • Facilitate early mobility (II) • Utilize endotracheal tubes with subglottic secretion drainage ports for patients expected to require more than 48 or 72 hours of mechanical ventilation (II) • Change the ventilator circuit only if visibly soiled or malfunctioning (I) • Elevate the head of the bed to 30°- 45° (I a ) • Selective oral or digestive decontamination (I b ) • Regular oral care with chlorhexidine (II) • Prophylactic probiotics (II) • Ultrathin polyurethane endotracheal tube cuffs (III) • Automated control of endotracheal tube cuff pressure (III) • Saline instillation before tracheal suctioning (III) • Mechanical tooth brushing (III) • Silver-coated endotracheal tubes (II) • Kinetic beds (II) • Prone positioning (II c ) • Stress ulcer prophylaxis (II) • Early tracheotomy (I) • Monitoring residual gastric volumes (II) • Early parenteral nutrition (II) • Closed/in-line endotracheal suctioning (II) Î In addition, approximately 5%-10% of mechanically ventilated patients develop other ventilator-associated events (VAEs). These include acute respiratory distress syndrome, pneumothorax, pulmonary embolism, lobar atelectasis, and pulmonary edema. 21

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