Table 1.
Screening for Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS) (First Response) | |
---|---|
First responder personnel | Bedside nurses (acute care hospitals); bedside nurses or patient care assistants (postacute care sites) |
Timing | Every 12 hours from the time of admission; clock-time for screening decided on by unit nurses |
Elements | Heart rate, temperature, respiratory rate, latest white blood cell (WBC) count, presence of altered mental status. Deviations from normal range are awarded points and a total score is computed; for acute care hospitals only, a total score of ≥ 4 is interpreted as positive for SIRS and initiates contact of the second responder.* |
Evidence or guidelines for elements |
Elements derived from clinical syndrome described as SIRS; modified in prior testing at the SERRI convener facility; approach to scoring based on that used in the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) severity of illness rating system1 |
Actions | None if score < 4; if score ≥ 4, second responder is contacted immediately. |
Other | Screening tool is integrated into the electronic health record of most SERRI partners; a few partners use a Web-based or paper format. |
Responding to a Patient with a Positive Screen (Second Response) | |
Second responder personnel | Nurse practitioners (some acute care hospitals); charge nurses or rapid response teams |
Timing | Within one hour of detection of positive screen |
Elements | Physical examination and search for source of infection; laboratory work, including cultures and sensitivities; fluid resuscitation; antibiotics; nursing interventions |
Evidence or guidelines for elements |
Based on the 2008 and subsequent recommendations for goal-directed therapies from the Surviving Sepsis Campaign; 20082 and 20123 International Guidelines for Management of Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock; and recommendations of an expert panel of acute care surgeons at the SERRI convener facility (Houston Methodist Hospital) |
Actions | Decision about need for transfer to ICU; notification of attending physician; evaluation for possible infection; early goal-directed interventions (collection of blood and fluids for culture before start of antibiotics; stat fluid resuscitation; administer antibiotics within 1 hour); reassessment after interventions |
Other | Nurse practitioners (NPs) in Texas can be credentialed as independent practitioners; at the convener facility and some other SERRI acute care sites, the NPs, using second response/sepsis evaluation and treatment protocols approved by the hospital medical staff, can institute these protocols without waiting for the approval of the attending physician. |
For the skilled nursing facility/long term acute care hospitals, the positive screen threshold was lowered to ≥ 3 shortly after the initiative’s introduction because most patients in those sites would not have had a WBC count measured in the previous 24 hours.
References
Knaus WA, et al. APACHE II: A severity of disease classification system. Crit Care Med. 1985;13:818–829.
RP, et al. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock: 2008. Crit Care Med. 2008;36: 296–327. Erratum in Crit Care Med. 2008;36:1394–1396.
Dellinger RP, et al.; Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines Committee including The Pediatric Subgroup. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock, 2012. Intensive Care Med. 2013;39:165–228.