Althea Vol 2 No 2 Final.indd Althea Medical Journal. 2015;2(2) 250 AMJ June, 2015 Nurses’ Knowledge of Blood Culture Sampling Procedure Wulan Ardhana Iswari,1 Chrysanti Murad,2 Ida Parwati 3 1Faculty of Medicine Universitas Padjadjaran, 2Department of Microbiology & Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine Universitas Padjadjaran, 3Department of Clinical Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Padjadjaran/Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital Bandung Abstract Background: False-positive blood culture results due to contaminated samples have shown to increase patients’ health costs, including the use of broad spectrum antibiotics and prolonged hospital length of stay. While previous research have suggested that increasing staff knowledge on proper specimen collection lowers contamination rates significantly, staff ’s current knowledge of hospital-recommended sample collection procedure have yet to be assessed in Dr. Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital, Bandung, Indonesia. Methods: This was a cross-sectional descriptive study on 81 Emergency Department nurses in Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital, Indonesia. Subjects were asked to complete a questionnaire in order to measure their knowledge of blood culture sampling procedure in accordance with the hospital’s standard operating procedure. Results: Among 81 subjects enrolled, 51 managed to adequately describe the prerequisites in proper blood culture sampling procedure and their purpose as dictated by Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital’s standard operating procedure. Conclusions: Up to 67% of nurses conducting blood sampling procedure in Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital’s Emergency Department understood the prerequisites of hospital-recommended blood culture sampling procedure and their purpose. [AMJ.2015;2(1):250–2] Keywords: Blood culture, knowledge, nurses Correspondence: Wulan Ardhana Iswari, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Padjadjaran, Jalan Raya Bandung-Sumedang Km.21, Jatinangor, Sumedang, Indonesia, Phone: +62 821 1650 7473 Email: wulanardhana@gmail.com Introduction Blood culture remains the most important diagnostic procedure to detect systemic bacterial infection1. However, contaminated samples resulting in false-positive cultures significantly increase patient’s financial burden compared to true negative results by prolonging hospital length of stay2, prompting the need for additional laboratory tests including second blood cultures3 and broad spectrum antibiotics2-4. Contamination rates vary among institutions from 0.6–6% despite a set target rate of 3% 5 and tends to be higher in teaching hospitals where blood culture sampling is not conducted by a specialized phlebotomy team6. Several prevention methods have been proposed, from procedure modifications, installing a dedicated phlebotomy team5, to supplementing instruction sheets on blood culture sampling kit7. Roth et al.6 study found that in a setting where phlebotomy is conducted by nurses and auxiliary nurses, increasing the knowledge of the phlebotomy staff about proper blood culture procedure reduce the rate of contamination significantly (2.59% pre-intervention; 2.23% post-intervention, 95% CI, 0.76 to 0.98)6 This study aimed to measure the knowledge of nursing staff in Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital’s Emergency Room on proper blood culture procedure according to the guidelines published by Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital’s Clinical Pathology Department8. Methods This was a cross-sectional descriptive study conducted in Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital Bandung, Indonesia, from October 2012 to December 2012. All 96 nurses in the Emergency Room were asked to fill a self- completed 11-item questionnaire on blood culture sampling procedure tailored according Althea Medical Journal. 2015;2(2) 251 to the hospital’s standard operating procedure over a period of time; 15 were sampled to test the validity of the questionnaire for the first week of the study and the rest were taken until the second week of November 2012. The questionnaire, comprising of 11 items, was designed to measure participant’s knowledge on the following: (a). the purpose of blood culture sampling; (b). the purpose, procedure, and recommended materials used in disinfection in blood culture sampling; (c). other preventive measures against sample contamination as prescribed in the hospital’s guideline. The results were then classified into “Adequate” (≥70% of responses correct) and “Poor” (<70% of responses correct). Questionnaire development took place in the beginning of October 2012, with questionnaires completed by 15 initial subjects and subsequently tested for reliability using cronbach’s alpha test. The remaining 81 subjects completed the questionnaires in the following weeks and responses were then recorded and measured Results More female subjects (51.9%) participated in this study from a total of 81 subjects. As many as 46.9% were aged 30-39 years old, 30.9% between the ages 20-29, and 11.1% were 40- 49. Twenty-nine point six percent of them had been working in Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital for 11-19 years, 28.4% for less than 5 years, 22.2% for 5-10 years and a meager 7.4% had been working for more than 20 years. The majority of subjects (63%) managed to show an adequate level of knowledge regarding blood culture sample collection procedure. There were 79 subjects (97.5%) knew that blood culture is used to detect systemic bacterial infection; all of them understood the purpose of disinfection in blood culture sample collection (Table 1). Other prerequisites in proper blood culture collection were also understood by the majority (other prerequisites: 72.8%, 82.7%, 81.5%, and 72.8%). However, when asked to describe the steps of blood sample collection, only a mere 8 subjects or 9.9% were able to do so correctly. Discussion Aronson et al.9 suggested that blood culture as a diagnostic test is unusually dependent on human behavior (sterile technique, timing and volume) and clinical judgment. A lapse in these influencing behaviors might increase contamination rate; Roth et al.6 study has shown that informational intervention, or increasing phlebotomy staff ’s knowledge, could significantly reduce the rate of blood culture contamination. In this study, the majority of nurses have adequately described the prerequisites Table 1 Nurses’ Knowledge of Blood Culture Sample Collection Items Asked Number of responses correct Frequency % Purpose of blood culture 79 97.5 Difference between blood sample collection for cultures and other tests 42 51.9 Draw blood for culture before other tests 54 66.7 Purpose of disinfection 81 100 Recommended disinfectant 67 82.7 Sampling site 55 67.9 Other prerequisites Letting disinfectant to dry before drawing blood 59 72.8 Recommended numbers of sampling site 67 82.7 Swab bottle top with alcohol 66 81.5 Bottles of media use 59 72.8 Describe the steps of blood culture sampling procedure 8 9.9 Wulan Ardhana Iswari, Chrysanti Murad, Ida Parwati: Nurses’ Knowledge of Blood Culture Sampling Procedure Althea Medical Journal. 2015;2(2) 252 AMJ June, 2015 in proper blood culture sample collection according to the guidelines issued by Dr. Hasan Sadikin General Hospital. A question is raised, however, when only a scarce minority (9.9%) managed to describe the steps in sample collection correctly; this suggests more training in this area might be helpful for nurses who conduct blood culture sample collection. This study was limited due to the constraints of time and resources, the lack of deep interview method towards the subjects, which resulted in several missing characteristics data. Further research is needed to improve the limitation and broaden the scope to compare practicing nurses’ knowledge to blood culture sampling procedure recommended by other, newer literatures References 1. Brooks GF, Carroll KC, Butel JS, Morse SA. Medical microbiology, 24th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill; 2007. 2. Alahmadi Y, Aldeyab M, McElnay J, Scott M, Darwish Elhajji F, Magee F, et al. Clinical and economic impact of contaminated blood cultures within the hospital setting. J Hosp Infect. 2011;77(3):233–6. 3. Waltzman ML, Harper M. Financial and clinical impact of false-positive blood culture results. Clin Infect Dis. 2001;33(3):296–9. 4. Gander RM, Byrd L, DeCrescenzo M, Hirany S, Bowen M, Baughman J. Impact of blood cultures drawn by phlebotomy on contamination rates and health care costs in a hospital emergency department. J Clin Microbiol. 2009;47(4):1021–4. 5. Hall KK, Lyman JA. Updated review of blood culture contamination. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2006;19(4):788–802. 6. Roth A, Wiklund AE, Palsson AS, Melander EZ, Wullt M, Cronqvist J, et al. Reducing blood culture contamination by a simple informational intervention. J Clin Microbiol. 2010;48(12):4552–8. 7. Madeo M, Jackson T, Williams C. Simple measures to reduce the rate of contamination of blood cultures in accident and emergency. Emerg Med J. 2005;22(11):810–1. 8. Parwati I, Turbawati D, Andriyoko B. Pengambilan spesimen untuk pemeriksaan mikrobiologi. Bandung: UPF Patologi Klinik Rumah Sakit Dr. Hasan Sadikin; 2012. 9. Mylotte J, Tayara A. 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