The Relationship Between Intravenous Fluid Contamination and the Frequency of Tubing Replacement
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Infection Control
- Vol. 6 (9) , 367-370
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0195941700063335
Abstract
Medical patients receiving IV therapy were randomly assigned to one of two IV tubing change groups. One group had a 48-hour tubing change and the other had no tubing change for the remainder of the cannula placement. A daily IV fluid specimen was processed microbiologically. To complete the study, a minimum of 3 continuous days of therapy and three fluid specimens was required. There were two contaminated specimens, one in each tubing change group. The contamination rate in the 48-hour change group was 0.87% and 0.96% in the no change group. The rate difference of 0.09% has a 95% confidence interval (−0.035 to +0.036) which includes zero. Survival analysis also revealed no significant difference in the cumulative probability of survival, however the mean duration of continuous tubing use of 4.3 days in the no change group and 1.8 days in the 48 hour change group were significantly different (p<0.05). The cumulative probability of surviving contamination free was 0.988 in the 48-hour group and 0.987 in the no-change group. We conclude that it is safe to change IV tubing at intervals up to but not exceeding 4 days.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Safety of Changing Intravenous Delivery Systems at Longer Than 24-Hour IntervalsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1979
- Contamination of Intravenous Infusion Fluid: Effects of Changing Administration SetsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1979
- A Semiquantitative Culture Method for Identifying Intravenous-Catheter-Related InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977
- Nationwide epidemic of septicemia caused by contaminated intravenous productsThe American Journal of Medicine, 1976