The current Medicare payment structure and some of the recent guidelines aimed at reducing catheter-associated urinary tract infections may be generating a financial incentive for the protocolized, systematic removal of indwelling catheters in hospitalized patients—including those with spinal cord injury. This creates a tension with the Consortium for Spinal Cord Medicine’s clinical practice guidelines for the management of neurogenic bladder. This article presents a series of cases and a discussion of the implications with regard to patient safety and quality of life.
CITATION STYLE
Davis, M. (2019). When guidelines conflict: patient safety, quality of life, and CAUTI reduction in patients with spinal cord injury. Spinal Cord Series and Cases, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41394-019-0198-4
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