Wizner Kerri, Radonovich Lewis, Bell Allie, Oke Charles, Yarbrough Mary
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory, Pittsburgh, PA.
Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health, Washington DC.
J Int Soc Respir Prot. 2018 Jul;35(1):26-35.
Respiratory protective devices (RPDs) are used for infection prevention in healthcare settings during routine patient care and public health emergencies. In recent years, healthcare systems have experienced shortages of RPDs during outbreaks of infectious diseases, in part due to a lack of information about their availability. New tools to track RPD inventories may improve accessibility during an emergency. Investigators at Vanderbilt University have identified four major themes that influence RPD use for infection prevention: hospital preparedness, responsiveness to airborne pathogens, potential exposure outcomes, and infection control practices related to respirator effectiveness. Based on these findings, an RPD surveillance tool (RST) was developed to collect and share near real-time data about RPD supplies in healthcare facilities. The objective of this study was to conduct a feasibility assessment of this RST.
The new online surveillance tool was implemented at four large, urban, acute care U.S. hospitals in January 2014; data was collected about RPD inventory, tracking systems, hospital characteristics, and utility of gathered information.
The RST was implemented successfully and without difficulty at hospitals that had 78 to 90 percent occupancy rates. Participating hospitals reported that the RST (1) provided value for benchmarking their RPD supply, (2) promoted understanding about RPD accessibility among hospital systems engaged in infection control, and (3) served as a means to assess RPD program quality.
Implementation of this newly developed RST is feasible and appears to have utility in U.S. hospitals for tracking and understanding RPD use for routine healthcare delivery and public health emergencies.
呼吸防护设备(RPD)用于医疗机构日常患者护理和突发公共卫生事件期间的感染预防。近年来,在传染病暴发期间,医疗系统经历了RPD短缺的情况,部分原因是缺乏关于其可用性的信息。追踪RPD库存的新工具可能会在紧急情况下提高其可及性。范德比尔特大学的研究人员确定了影响RPD用于感染预防的四个主要主题:医院准备情况、对空气传播病原体的反应能力、潜在暴露结果以及与呼吸器有效性相关的感染控制措施。基于这些发现,开发了一种RPD监测工具(RST),以收集和共享医疗机构中RPD供应的近实时数据。本研究的目的是对该RST进行可行性评估。
2014年1月,在美国四家大型城市急症护理医院实施了新的在线监测工具;收集了有关RPD库存、追踪系统、医院特征以及所收集信息的实用性的数据。
RST在入住率为78%至90%的医院中成功且顺利地实施。参与研究的医院报告称,RST(1)为其RPD供应的基准测试提供了价值,(2)促进了参与感染控制的医院系统之间对RPD可及性的理解,(3)作为评估RPD项目质量的一种手段。
这种新开发的RST的实施是可行的,并且在美国医院中似乎对于追踪和理解RPD在常规医疗服务和突发公共卫生事件中的使用情况具有实用性。