Blood Culture
Collection Guidelines

Blood culture collection practices are evolving significantly due to a combination of clinical, technological, and regulatory factors focused on reducing blood culture contamination (BCC). Kurin clinicians educate on guidelines and best practices defined by the agencies and associations below.

Association for Vascular Access (AVA)

Association for Vascular Access (AVA) Adult Clinical Practice Guidelines. Journal of the Association for Vascular Access. January Supplement 2026, Volume 31.


Practice guidelines updated in January 2026 state that it is reasonable to use blood culture diversion devices during specimen collection when contamination is possible.

Association for Vascular Access (AVA)

Association for Vascular Access (AVA)


Recommendation 1: Use of Blood Culture Diversion Devices

It is reasonable to use blood culture diversion devices (BCDDs) during specimen collection when contamination is possible.

Summary of Evidence

Authors of a prospective, quasi-experimental study assessed contamination rates among intensive care unit (ICU) and non-ICU patients where phlebotomists used either traditional veni­puncture or a BCDD. Use of the BCDD resulted in a 0% con­tamination rate across 11,202 samples compared with a 2.3% contamination rate from 4,759 traditional samples. The authors also reported a significant reduction in false-positive central line–associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) diagnoses when BCDD were used, supporting their utility in improving diagnostic accuracy and avoiding unnecessary treatment.

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS)

Final rule 42 C.F.R § 482.42

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services 2019

CMS Conditions of Participation require hospitals to “demonstrate adherence to nationally recognized infection prevention and control guidelines for reducing the transmission of infections, as well as best practices for improving antibiotic use where applicable, and for reducing the development and transmission of HAIs and antibiotic-resistant organisms.”

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS)

Since early 2020, the CMS Conditions of Participation have required hospitals to “demonstrate adherence to nationally recognized infection prevention and control guidelines for reducing the transmission of infections, as well as best practices for improving antibiotic use where applicable, and for reducing the development and transmission of HAIs and antibiotic-resistant organisms.” CMS Compliance will require:

  1. A hospital’s infection prevention and control and antibiotic stewardship programs be active and hospital-wide for the surveillance, prevention, and control of [hospital acquired infections] and other infectious diseases.
  2. Optimization of antibiotic use through stewardship.

In December 2022, a Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Consensus-Based Entity (CBE) endorsed the CDC's proposal to establish a national patient safety measure focused on BCC. (10.1093/jalm/jfae132)

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Blood Culture Contamination: An Overview for Infection Control and Antibiotic Stewardship Programs Working with the Clinical Laboratory.

The CDC advocates that reducing BCC is a shared responsibility of laboratory, infection prevention, and stewardship teams. They recommend evidence-based tools like diversion devices to help achieve sustainable improvement.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

In offering guidance, the CDC references a study by Doern GV et al, which calls for the use of diversion devices saying, “There are devices that are commercially available that have shown promise in further reducing blood culture contamination rates. These devices initially divert a small amount of potentially contaminated blood and then collect blood for the blood culture.”

Source: Blood Culture Contamination: An Overview for Infection Control and Antibiotic Stewardship Programs Working with the Clinical Laboratory

Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI®)

Principles and Procedures for Blood Cultures, 2nd Edition. CLSI Document M47Ed2E  2022

These approved guidelines address best practices for blood culture collection, including aspects of contamination reduction. It acknowledges and supports diversion as a valid method for improving blood culture accuracy.

Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI®)

This 2022 CLSI guideline provides comprehensive recommendations for blood culture collection, transport, processing, and result interpretation to enhance the detection of bacteremia and fungemia. M47 supports improved laboratory practices for detecting bloodstream infections, helping clinicians make informed treatment decisions.

Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology

APIC. Preventing Catheter-Associated Bloodstream Infections (CABSI) in Adults: APIC Guidelines. SBAR: Specimen Diversion Impact on  Bloodstream Infection APIC CRPI | Last updated 5/2/25.

Although APIC calls for more research on how diversion impacts bloodstream infection detection, it recommends using a waste tube or diversion device if contamination rates remain high despite proper collection technique.

Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology

Recommendation: Consider the use of a waste tube or diversion device as a strategy for reducing blood culture contamination rates when blood culture contamination rates are higher than expected despite high compliance with appropriate collection technique. Further research is necessary to understand the relationship between initial specimen diversion and bloodstream infection.

Partnership for Quality Measurement

Adult Blood Culture Contamination Rate: A national measure and standard for clinical laboratories and antibiotic stewardship programs (Measure #3658). Washington, DC: National Quality Forum. 2023.

The Partnership for Quality Measurement (PQM) supports establishing and tracking metrics like BCC rates—but does not currently have guidance on diversion devices. PQM recommends that hospitals monitor and reduce BCC rates, with a target of no more than 3% and an ultimate goal of zero. PQM plans to make new measures required reporting components by 2029.

Partnership for Quality Measurement

PQM Recommendations for Blood Culture Collection

1. Blood Culture Contamination Rate (BCC)

  • PQM sets a benchmark maximum contamination rate of 3% for adult blood cultures. However, many hospitals report wide variation, ranging from 0.6% up to 12.5% in some settings.
  • Institutions should track and report this rate monthly, calculating it as:

    (Number of contaminated blood culture sets ÷ Total number of blood culture sets collected) × 100
  • While 3% is the established standard, PQM notes that some systems achieve rates well below this threshold. The ideal goal, per PQM, is to drive contamination rate as close to 0% as possible.

2. Single-Set Blood Culture Rate (Inadequate Volume)

  • PQM also emphasizes the importance of monitoring the rate of single-set blood cultures, which are defined as instances where only one culture set is collected within a 24-hour period. This typically yields insufficient diagnostic volume and impairs the ability to distinguish true bacteremia from contamination.
  • The single-set rate is similarly calculated monthly as:

    (Number of single set blood cultures without another set collected within 24 hours ÷ Total blood culture sets collected) × 100

3. Recommended Blood Culture Practices

  • For adult patients with suspected bloodstream infections, PQM endorses collecting two to four blood culture sets per septic episode (defined as a 24-hour period) to ensure adequate detection of bacteremia and proper differentiation of contaminants.
  • PQM supports the inclusion of blood volume as a future required measure, with a target of 40–60 mL per septic episode, to strengthen diagnostic accuracy.

4. PQM Timeline for Implementation

By 2026–2029, PQM plans to:

  • Review and update the measure based on ongoing literature and practice.
  • Begin collecting and monitoring both contamination and volume data, including the proportion of single sets.
  • By 2029, PQM aims to make these measures—BCC rate and blood volume collected—required reporting components for hospital accreditation and CMS quality programs.

National Quality Forum (NQF)

Hospital Onset-Bacteremia and Fungemia Playbook. Washington, DC. 2024.

The NQF Hospital Onset-Bacteremia and Fungemia (HOB) Playbook is a guide to help organizations, leaders, and clinical care teams in acute care hospitals implement or improve HOB management initiatives. Included in the guidance on how to better prevent, identify, and treat hospital-onset bloodstream infections, the Playbook explains the CDC NHSN quality measure (CBE #3686) that uses blood culture results to define HOB. Blood culture contamination rate is offered as a key monitoring metric for performance improvement and the authors point to practices that reduce contamination, such as use of diversion devices or waste tubes.

National Quality Forum (NQF)

In Table 10. Examples of Relevant Supporting Metrics for HOB Management, (pg. 48), NQF includes a supporting metric for HOB management that states, "Use of blood culture diversion device or waste tubes to reduce contamination, unless drawing through device to identify suspected source of infection." In Phase 4 – Continuous Improvement, the Playbook identifies several metrics tied to blood culture practices:

  • Number of blood cultures collected as contaminants
  • Blood culture contamination rate
  • Number of common commensals identified from contaminated cultures
  • Days of therapy avoided as a result of identifying contaminated cultures

American Society for Microbiology (ASM)

American Society for Microbiology evidence-based laboratory medicine practice guidelines to reduce blood culture contamination rates: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2024.

ASM recommendations on blood culture practices acknowledge contamination as a critical concern and support initial specimen diversion as part of improving diagnostic accuracy.

American Society for Microbiology (ASM)

The 2024 ASM guidelines include the following excerpt:

Key action statement: institutions (facilities) that draw BCs should consider implementing a diversion device as part of the procedure for drawing peripheral BCs (evidence quality: II, recommendation strength: moderate).

Aggregate evidence quality: II

Benefits: diversion devices reduce BCC by an average of 64% and may lead to more appropriate therapy for bloodstream infections.

Risk, harm, and cost: there is a potential to contribute to iatrogenic anemia in patients with prolonged hospital stays with frequent phlebotomy to obtain BCs if large amounts of blood are discarded. Diversion tubes must be labeled with patient information as with any other specimen tube to avoid unlabeled or mislabeled tubes being processed for other lab studies. The cost of using a non-commercial diversion tube should keep additional costs to a minimum.

Benefit–harm assessment: preponderance of benefit.

American Society for Microbiology (ASM)

Laboratory approaches to determining blood culture contamination rates: an ASM Laboratory Practices Subcommittee report. 2023

This mini-review provides practical recommendations on BCC rate reporting, the parameters to define for the pre-set criteria, how to collect and interpret the data, and additional analysis to include in a BCC report.

American Society for Microbiology (ASM)

The Subcommittee report includes the following excerpt:

"Recent attention has been given to lowering the acceptable threshold to ≤ 1%, as it has been noted that this rate is achievable even without blood diversion devices. In large studies, high-performing (90th percentile and above) laboratories have reported contamination rates of ≤ 1%. Therefore, this threshold may be considered aspirational by some. Conversely, a BCC rate of ≤ 1% may not always be achievable due to an expected baseline of transient bacteremia and true bacteremia that qualify as contamination based on laboratory criteria. Some investigators have reported that even with the use of initial blood diversion devices, rates lower than 1% may not be attained in some environments. In any case, institutions may choose to lower the acceptable threshold from the standard ≤ 3% to a level that is practically achievable while ensuring the highest quality BC collections."

Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)

IDSA. Guide to Utilization of the Microbiology Laboratory for Diagnosis of Infectious Diseases: 2024.

IDSA supports blood culture diversion as an evidence-based method to reduce contamination, publicly recognizing diversion as clinically valuable, cost-effective, and aligned with antimicrobial stewardship goals.

Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)

The Guide to Utilization of the Microbiology Laboratory for Diagnosis of Infectious Diseases was updated in 2024 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) and the American Society for Microbiology (ASM).

The update includes a section entitled "Bloodstream infections and infections of the cardiovascular system" (page 6) which includes the following recommendation: "To minimize the risk of contamination of the blood culture with commensal skin microbiota, meticulous care should be taken in skin preparation prior to venipuncture. In addition, products are available that allow diversion and discard of the first few milliliters of blood that are most likely to contain skin contaminant."

Infusion Nursing Society (INS)

Infusion Therapy Standards of Practice, 9th Edition.
Journal of Infusion Nursing. 47(1S):S1-S285. 2024.

INS encourages facilities to evaluate whether incorporating diversion into their blood culture collection practices is worthwhile, since evidence indicates a contamination reduction benefit.

Infusion Nursing Society (INS)

The 2024 INS Guidelines on Blood Culture Diversion includes Section 41: Blood Sampling – Practice Recommendations Comment G, Part C, which suggests: “Consider the costs and benefits in implementing a consistent process to divert and discard the initial blood sample when drawing blood cultures. Studies have demonstrated reduction in blood culture contamination with use of a diversion device.”

College of American Pathologists (CAP)

CAP 2018 Q-Tracks: MIC.22630

CAP strongly promotes monitoring, feedback, and quality improvement efforts to reduce BCC. While diversion devices are not mandated, CAP acknowledges that diversion can be a highly effective component of contamination reduction strategies.

College of American Pathologists (CAP)

While CAP does not formally mandate diversion, it acknowledges that diversion devices can help reduce contamination and may be considered as part of improvement strategies. CAP publications highlight the effectiveness of diversion:

  • A laboratory stewardship case presented via CAP’s executive insights reported how diversion reduced contamination rates from about 3% to ≤ 1%, providing significant clinical and financial benefits. (info.cap.org)
  • In CAP Today (2017), diversion was described as a simple yet powerful method to reduce contamination—with studies showing up to 85% reduction in skin flora contamination. captodayonline.com

Emergency Nurses Association (ENA)

[Currently in revision] ENA Emergency Nursing Resources Development Committee. Clinical practice guideline: prevention of blood culture contamination. Emergency Nurses Association; 2018

ENA explicitly supports the use of diversion as an evidence-based, moderate-strength recommendation to lower the risk of blood culture contamination.

Source: J Emerg Nurs. 2018;44(3):285.e1-285.e24. doi:10.1016/j.jen.2018.03.019 (Subscription required)

Emergency Nurses Association (ENA)

The ENA guidelines highlight blood culture diversion in Recommendation 13:

"The ENA advises that when drawing blood culture specimens via peripheral venipuncture, practitioners should divert the initial 1–2 mL of blood into a sterile receptacle—i.e., perform specimen diversion as part of the collection process. This recommendation is graded as Level B – Moderate evidence."

International Guidelines

National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), United Kingdom

Recommendation 1.1 states “Kurin Lock can be used in the NHS to reduce contamination in blood culture collection in emergency departments with high blood culture contamination rates while more evidence is generated.”

Medical technologies guidance, Reference number: MTG77
Published: 03 April 2024

International Guidelines

NICE has made this recommendation because although there is uncertainty around the evidence of cost effectiveness for Kurin Lock, antimicrobial resistance is an area of high unmet need in the NHS.

Adopting Kurin Lock would need no change to standard practice. Clinical experts report that it is easy to use and needs minimal training compared with other methods to reduce contamination.

Evidence generation alongside using Kurin Lock in the NHS should give an opportunity to collect resource impact data to inform the economic modelling.

These recommendations will be reviewed within 3 years, or sooner if new evidence becomes available. Take this and the uncertainty around pricing into account when negotiating lengths of contracts.