The World Health Organization (WHO) today published guidelines aimed at preventing bloodstream infections from peripheral intravenous catheters (PIVCs).

Noting that up to 70% of all hospitals inpatients require the use of a catheter inserted into a peripheral vein or artery, the WHO says that poor practices in the insertion, maintenance, and removal of PIVCs carry the high risk of introducing bacteria into the bloodstream, which can result in life-threatening conditions such as sepsis and difficult-to-treat complications in major organs—particularly when the infections are caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
The burden of these infections is significant. The WHO estimates that, from 2000 through 2018, the average mortality among patients with healthcare-associated sepsis was 24.4% and more than double that—52.3%—among intensive care unit patients.
Preventable infections
But the agency believes that catheter-associated bloodstream infections are among the most preventable healthcare-associated infections if proper procedures are followed by clinicians. The evidence-based guidelines include 14 good practice statements and 23 recommendations that focus on education and training of healthcare workers, techniques of asepsis and hand hygiene, catheter selection, and proper PIVC insertion, maintenance, access, and removal.
"Infections associated with health care delivery represent a preventable tragedy and a serious threat to the quality and safety of health care," Bruce Aylward, WHO assistant director-general for universal healthcare, said in a WHO press release. "Implementing clean care and infection prevention and control recommendations is critical to saving lives and alleviating a great deal of avoidable suffering experienced by people around the world."
Subsequent guidelines will address other type of intravascular catheters.