4.4 Editorial Material

Nonventilator hospital-acquired pneumonia: A call to action Recommendations from the National Organization to Prevent Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia (NOHAP) among nonventilated patients

Journal

INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 8, Pages 991-996

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/ice.2021.239

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. VA Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI) program of the VHA Health Services Research and Development Service
  2. VHA Diffusion of Excellence Initiative

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The document outlines the research needs to support the call to action against non-ventilator-associated hospital-acquired pneumonia (NVHAP) in the United States. Primary needs include estimating the economic cost of NVHAP, elucidating the pathophysiology, developing surveillance methods, testing prevention strategies, and identifying policy levers. A joint task force including various stakeholders developed this document.
In 2020 a group of U.S. healthcare leaders formed the National Organization to Prevent Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia (NOHAP) to issue a call to action to address non-ventilator-associated hospital-acquired pneumonia (NVHAP). NVHAP is one of the most common and morbid healthcare-associated infections, but it is not tracked, reported, or actively prevented by most hospitals. This national call to action includes (1) launching a national healthcare conversation about NVHAP prevention; (2) adding NVHAP prevention measures to education for patients, healthcare professionals, and students; (3) challenging healthcare systems and insurers to implement and support NVHAP prevention; and (4) encouraging researchers to develop new strategies for NVHAP surveillance and prevention. The purpose of this document is to outline research needs to support the NVHAP call to action. Primary needs include the development of better models to estimate the economic cost of NVHAP, to elucidate the pathophysiology of NVHAP and identify the most promising pathways for prevention, to develop objective and efficient surveillance methods to track NVHAP, to rigorously test the impact of prevention strategies proposed to prevent NVHAP, and to identify the policy levers that will best engage hospitals in NVHAP surveillance and prevention. A joint task force developed this document including stakeholders from the Veterans' Health Administration (VHA), the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), The Joint Commission, the American Dental Association, the Patient Safety Movement Foundation, Oral Health Nursing Education and Practice (OHNEP), Teaching Oral-Systemic Health (TOSH), industry partners and academia.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available