Islamabad, Feb 4 : Norovirus, a pathogen that often
causes food poisoning and gastroenteritis, was responsible for 18.2 percent of
all infection outbreaks and 65 percent of ward closures in U.S. hospitals during
a two-year period, according to a new study published in the American Journal of
Infection Control (AJIC), the official publication of APIC -- the Association
for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology.
A team of
researchers from Chartis, Main Line Health System, Lexington Insurance Company,
and APIC Consulting Services collected survey responses from 822 APIC members
who work in U.S. hospitals regarding outbreak investigations at their
institutions during 2008 and 2009. The study was conducted to determine how
often outbreak investigations are initiated in U.S. hospitals, as well as the
triggers for investigations, types of organisms, and control measures including
unit closures.
Thirty-five percent of the 822 hospitals responding had
investigated at least one outbreak in the previous two years. Four organisms
caused nearly 60 percent of the outbreaks: norovirus (18.2 percent),
Staphylococcus aureus (17.5 percent), Acinetobacter spp (13.7 percent), and
Clostridium difficile (10.3 percent). These results reflect 386 outbreak
investigations reported by 289 hospitals over a 24-month
period.
Medical/surgical units were the most common location of outbreak
investigations (25.7 percent), followed by surgical units (13.9 percent). Nearly
one-third (29.2 percent) of outbreaks were reported in a category that included
emergency departments, rehabilitation units, long-term acute care hospitals,
psychiatric/behavioral health units, and skilled nursing facilities. According
to the results, the average number of confirmed cases per outbreak was 10.1 and
the average duration was 58.4 days. Unit closures were reported in 22.6 percent
of the cases, causing an average 16.7 bed closures for 8.3 days.
Of
reported outbreaks, only 132 (52.2 percent) of investigations were reported to
an external agency, with just 71 (28.4 percent) involving assistance in the
investigation by an external resource. In most states, reporting to the state
health department is required and can provide hospitals with expertise to
expedite and expand their outbreak investigations.
"It is clear that
outbreaks of healthcare-associated infections occur with some frequency in
hospitals as well as nonacute settings," state the authors. "An infection
prevention and control program and its staff should be prepared for all aspects
of an outbreak investigation through written policies and procedures as well as
communication with internal and external
partners."
Ends
SA/EN
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» Norovirus is the leading cause of infection outbreaks in US hospitals
Norovirus is the leading cause of infection outbreaks in US hospitals
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