Haley R W, Culver D H, White J W, Morgan W M, Emori T G, Munn V P, Hooton T M
Am J Epidemiol. 1985 Feb;121(2):182-205. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a113990.
In a representative sample of US general hospitals, the authors found that the establishment of intensive infection surveillance and control programs was strongly associated with reductions in rates of nosocomial urinary tract infection, surgical wound infection, pneumonia, and bacteremia between 1970 and 1975-1976, after controlling for other characteristics of the hospitals and their patients. Essential components of effective programs included conducting organized surveillance and control activities and having a trained, effectual infection control physician, an infection control nurse per 250 beds, and a system for reporting infection rates to practicing surgeons. Programs with these components reduced their hospitals' infection rates by 32%. Since relatively few hospitals had very effective programs, however, only 6% of the nation's approximately 2 million nosocomial infections were being prevented in the mid-1970s, leaving another 26% to be prevented by universal adoption of these programs. Among hospitals without effective programs, the overall infection rate increased by 18% from 1970 to 1976.
在一家美国综合医院的代表性样本中,作者发现,在控制了医院及其患者的其他特征后,强化感染监测与控制项目的建立与1970年至1975年至1976年间医院获得性尿路感染、手术伤口感染、肺炎和菌血症的发生率降低密切相关。有效项目的基本组成部分包括开展有组织的监测和控制活动,以及配备一名经过培训、高效的感染控制医生、每250张床位配备一名感染控制护士,还有一个向执业外科医生报告感染率的系统。具备这些组成部分的项目使医院的感染率降低了32%。然而,由于只有相对较少的医院拥有非常有效的项目,因此在20世纪70年代中期,美国约200万例医院获得性感染中只有6%得到了预防,另外26%有待通过普遍采用这些项目来预防。在没有有效项目的医院中,总体感染率从1970年到1976年上升了18%。