Keys to Success with the SAAR
The Standardized Antimicrobial Administration Ratio (SAAR) provides a standardized metric of antimicrobial use. The SAAR is a ratio comparing observed, or reported, antimicrobial use to the antimicrobial use predicted by a referent, or baseline, population.
- A SAAR < 1.0 indicates antimicrobial use was less than predicted.
- A SAAR = 1.0 indicates antimicrobial use was equivalent to the predicted use.
- A SAAR > 1.0 indicates antimicrobial use was greater than predicted.
A SAAR is not a definitive measure of appropriateness or judiciousness of antimicrobial use and any SAAR value may warrant additional investigation.
Remember: You can only calculate a SAAR when the number of predicted antimicrobial days are greater than one and the antimicrobial days do not exceed the days present.
The SAAR p-value is a statistical measure that indicates if observed or reported antimicrobial use is statistically significantly different from predicted antimicrobial use.
- If the p-value ≤ 0.05, then the reported antimicrobial days are statistically significantly different from predicted antimicrobial days.
- If the p-value > 0.05, then the reported antimicrobial days are not statistically significantly different than the predicted antimicrobial days.
Due to the large number of days present reported each month, most SAAR p-values are less than 0.05 and users should interpret them with caution, as statistical significance does not necessarily translate to clinical significance.
The 95% CI is the range of values in which we have a high degree of confidence that the true SAAR value lies.
- If the 95% CI does not include 1.0 (for example: 95% CI = [0.85, 0.92]), the SAAR is statistically significantly different than 1.0 (specifically, the reported antimicrobial days are significantly different than the predicted antimicrobial days).
- If the 95% CI includes 1.0 (for example: 95% CI = [0.85, 1.24]), the SAAR is not statistically significantly different than 1.0 (specifically, the reported antimicrobial days are not significantly different than the predicted antimicrobial days).
NHSN currently offers three SAAR baselines, each applicable to a select set of patient care locations and time periods. The table below provides a high-level overview of each baseline.
SAAR Baseline | Locations | Antimicrobial Categories | Dates |
---|---|---|---|
2014 baseline adult and pediatric SAARs* | 6 adult and pediatric intensive care units (ICUs) and wards | 5 antimicrobial categories | January 1, 2014 – December 31, 2018 |
2017 baseline adult and pediatric SAARs | 13 adult and pediatric medical, surgical, medical-surgical ICUs, wards, step down units, and oncology units | 15 antimicrobial categories | January 1, 2017 – present |
2018 baseline neonatal SAARs | 4 neonatal units, including step-down nurseries and neonatal critical care units | 7 antimicrobial categories | January 1, 2018 – present |
*You cannot directly compare SAARs calculated under the 2014 baseline with 2017 baseline SAAR values.
You can find reports based on each of the SAAR baselines in Analysis Reports, within the Antimicrobial Use and Resistance (AUR) Module folder.
Are you getting the “No Records Met Your Criteria” message when you try to generate a SAAR? Try these quick fixes to get your SAAR reports up and running.
Generate data sets
Newly uploaded data aren’t available in analysis reports until you generate new data sets within NHSN. Be sure to generate new data sets after uploading data into NHSN.
Check your user rights
NHSN uses the Patient Safety Annual Facility Survey for risk adjustment in the SAARs. Without access to the survey data, you cannot view the SAAR data. Review and correct your user rights with your NHSN Facility Administrator and then generate new data sets. Refer to the guidance document that outlines minimum AU rights pdf icon[PDF – 400 KB].
Check the location type
While NHSN encourages facilities to submit AU data from all NHSN-defined inpatient locations, facility-wide inpatient (FacWideIN), and select outpatient acute-care settings (specifically, Emergency Department, Pediatric Emergency Department and 24-hour Observation Area), you can only generate a SAAR for the specific locations included in each SAAR baseline. You can find a list of the locations you can generate 2017 or 2018 baseline SAARs for in Table 5 of the AUR Module Protocol pdf icon[PDF – 1 MB]. In the future, as more facilities submit AU data, the NHSN Team hopes to develop SAARs for additional location types.
Email the NHSN Helpdesk
If you tried all the options above and still can’t generate a SAAR, please email the NHSN Helpdesk at nhsn@cdc.gov.
- Surveillance for Antimicrobial Resistance Options
- AUR Module Protocol pdf icon[PDF – 1 MB]
- 2014 Baseline SAAR Details pdf icon[PDF – 100 KB]
- Strategies to Assess Antibiotic Use to Drive Improvements in Hospitals pdf icon[PDF – 500 KB]
- Instructions for Mapping Patient Care Locations pdf icon[PDF – 2 MB]
- Patient Safety Analysis Quick Reference Guides
- NHSN Analysis Training