Haley R W
Infect Control. 1980 Jan-Feb;1(1):21-32. doi: 10.1017/s019594170005236x.
As part of the first two phases of the SENIC Project (Study on the Efficacy of Nosocomial Infection Control), information was collected from the heads of the infection surveillance and control programs (ISCPs) in U.S. hospitals. The data were analyzed to describe these respondents and to determine whether differences among them were related to their areas of professional training or to characteristics of the hospitals where they were located. The findings indicate that the ISCP heads constitute a very heterogeneous group, with substantial differences in age, professional training (40% are pathologists), characteristics of their medical practices, memberships in professional organizations related to infection control, time spent in ISCP activities, approach to epidemiologic problems, and opinions on the preventability of nosocomial infections and the seriousness of infection problems in their hospitals. These differences are related strongly to the ISCP heads' professional training, size of hospital, and, to a lesser extent, medical school affiliation, but there is little evidence that the differences are related to regional or urban-rural location or type of ownership of the hospitals. The average ISCP head estimates that about half of all nosocomial infections are preventable, but these estimates vary inversely with tenure in the position and the tendency to approach a clinical problem epidemiologically.
作为SENIC项目(医院感染控制效果研究)前两个阶段的一部分,从美国医院的感染监测与控制项目(ISCP)负责人那里收集了信息。对这些数据进行分析,以描述这些受访者,并确定他们之间的差异是否与他们的专业培训领域或所在医院的特征有关。研究结果表明,ISCP负责人构成了一个非常多样化的群体,在年龄、专业培训(40%是病理学家)、医疗实践特征、与感染控制相关的专业组织成员身份、在ISCP活动中花费的时间、解决流行病学问题的方法以及对医院内医院感染可预防性和感染问题严重性的看法等方面存在很大差异。这些差异与ISCP负责人的专业培训、医院规模密切相关,在较小程度上与医学院校附属关系有关,但几乎没有证据表明这些差异与医院的地区或城乡位置或所有制类型有关。ISCP负责人平均估计,所有医院感染中约有一半是可以预防的,但这些估计与任职时间以及从流行病学角度处理临床问题的倾向呈反比。