Zimakoff J, Stickler D J, Pontoppidan B, Larsen S O
National Centre for Hospital Hygiene, Statens Seruminstitut, Copenhagen S, Denmark.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 1996 Apr;17(4):215-21. doi: 10.1086/647283.
To establish the prevalence of urinary tract infection in patients undergoing various forms of bladder management.
A nationwide descriptive point-prevalence survey with logistic regression analysis of the data relating infection to bladder management.
Fifteen hospitals, 21 nursing homes, and 13 home care districts throughout Denmark.
Information was collected on 3,665 patients. On the day of the study, 349 patients had indwelling catheters and 1,150 were using external urine drainage systems (condoms or diapers) for bladder management.
The prevalence of urinary tract infections in catheterized patients and those using external drainage systems was 13.2% and 8.1%, respectively. The prevalence of hospital-acquired urinary tract infection (4.2%) had not changed from that reported in 1978. The proportion of these infections related to the indwelling catheter, however, had reduced from 66% to 30%. Logistic regression analysis confirmed that, when corrected for the patient-related confounders (female gender, age > 60 years, incontinence, immobility, and stay in hospital for longer than 15 days), condoms (odds ratio [OR], 5.94; 95% confidence interval [CI95], 2.8 to 12.5), indwelling catheters (OR, 3.3; CI95, 2.3 to 4.8), and diapers (OR, 1.5; CI95, 1.1 to 2.1) were significantly (P < .001, P < .001, and P = .008, respectively) related to infection.
Prevalence surveys have revealed that over the period 1978 to 1991, during which efforts have been made to restrict the use of indwelling catheters and to encourage the care of catheterized patients according to guidelines recommended by the Danish National Centre for Hospital Hygiene, the percentage of hospital-acquired urinary tract infections associated with indwelling catheters has been halved. External urine drainage systems, however, have emerged as significant risk factors for urinary tract infection.
确定接受各种膀胱管理方式的患者中尿路感染的患病率。
一项全国性描述性现患率调查,并对感染与膀胱管理相关数据进行逻辑回归分析。
丹麦各地的15家医院、21家养老院和13个家庭护理区。
收集了3665例患者的信息。在研究当天,349例患者留置导尿管,1150例患者使用外部尿液引流系统(避孕套或尿布)进行膀胱管理。
留置导尿管患者和使用外部引流系统患者的尿路感染患病率分别为13.2%和8.1%。医院获得性尿路感染的患病率(4.2%)与1978年报告的患病率没有变化。然而,这些感染中与留置导尿管相关的比例已从66%降至30%。逻辑回归分析证实,在对患者相关混杂因素(女性、年龄>60岁、尿失禁、行动不便和住院超过15天)进行校正后,避孕套(比值比[OR],5.94;95%置信区间[CI95],2.8至12.5)、留置导尿管(OR,3.3;CI95,2.3至4.8)和尿布(OR,1.5;CI95,1.1至2.1)与感染显著相关(P分别<.001、<.001和=.008)。
现患率调查显示,在1978年至1991年期间,丹麦国家医院卫生中心建议努力限制留置导尿管的使用并鼓励按照指南护理留置导尿管患者,与留置导尿管相关的医院获得性尿路感染的百分比已减半。然而,外部尿液引流系统已成为尿路感染的重要危险因素。