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Catheter dwell time and risk of catheter failure in adult patients with peripheral venous catheters
Author(s) -
Wei Tao,
Li Xuying,
Yue Zhiping,
Chen Yongyi,
Wang Yiren,
Yuan Zhong,
Lin Qin,
Tan Yan,
Peng Siyi,
Li Xingfeng
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.15035
Subject(s) - medicine , catheter , interquartile range , central venous catheter , incidence (geometry) , prospective cohort study , checklist , surgery , psychology , physics , optics , cognitive psychology
Aims and objectives To explore whether the risk of peripheral venous catheters failure remained constant throughout catheter use in adult patients. Background Peripheral venous catheters, widely used in adult patients, may have a critical threshold dwell time associated with increased risk of catheter failure. Design Prospective, observational study. We have complied with the STROBE checklist of items. Methods This study was conducted from July – October 2018 in Hunan, China. Data on patient factors, catheter factors and catheter failure events were collected. Poisson regression was used to assess the effect of catheter dwell time on catheter failure while adjusting for other variables. Results A total of 1,477 patients were included in the analysis. There were 854 cases (57.8%) of catheter failure. The median dwell time to catheter failure was 52 hr (interquartile range: 36–73 hr). The incidence rate of catheter failure significantly increased by 1.1%/h in the first 38 hr after catheter insertion. From 39–149 hr, the incidence rate significantly decreased, and at >149 hr, there was no significant change in the incidence rate. Meanwhile, factors such as vascular quality and infused drugs showed having an impact on catheter failure events. Conclusions The risk of catheter failure may not remain constant throughout the dwell time. The results suggest that nurses should assess the insertion site frequently in the first 38 hr. Relevance to clinical practice The significant increase in the risk of catheter failure per hour may warrant close and frequent inspection of insertion site during the first 38 hr.

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