Nicholls T M, Morris A J
Auckland Hospital.
N Z Med J. 1997 Aug 22;110(1050):314-6.
To determine the prevalence of nosocomial infection in Auckland Healthcare hospitals.
Nosocomial infections cause patient morbidity and prolong hospital stay. Reporting surveillance results to staff has been shown to reduce nosocomial infection rates.
Point prevalence study for all patients in Auckland, Green Lane and National Women's hospitals. Standard definitions for nosocomial infections were used.
One hundred and ten (12%) of 932 patients had 129 nosocomial infections: 27 (20%) surgical site infections; 25 (19%) lower respiratory tract infections; 23 (18%) skin/ soft tissue infections; 19 (15%) urinary tract infections; 14 (11%) bloodstream infections; and 21 (17%) other infections. Predominant organisms were: Staphylococcus aureus (29%), Escherichia coli (21%), other gram negative bacilli (14%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (6%), streptococci (6%) and Candida albicans (6%). The prevalence of nosocomial infection was lower in National Women's Hospital (5%) than either Green Lane or Auckland hospitals (15% and 14% respectively), p < 0.01. The prevalence of nosocomial infection was the same in medical and surgical patients, 53 of 394 (14%) and 42 of 297 (14%), respectively. The highest prevalence was in intensive care unit patients, 7 of 31 (23%). The prevalence of nosocomial infection increased with patient age, 17-50 yr (8%) vs > 50 yr (14%), p < 0.01, and duration of hospitalisation 2% for < 2 days, 6% for 2-7 days vs 22% for > 7 days, p < 0.01. Risk factors for nosocomial infection were present in many patients: 339 (36%) had intravenous catheters in place; 268 (29%) patients had undergone surgery during their current admission; 122 (13%) had urinary catheters in place; and 122 (13%) had other invasive devices in situ.
Our results are comparable with hospitals of similar size overseas. This study provides a base line for future studies which will enable the monitoring of trends over time and the impact of focused infection control initiatives.
确定奥克兰医疗保健医院医院感染的患病率。
医院感染会导致患者发病并延长住院时间。已证明向工作人员报告监测结果可降低医院感染率。
对奥克兰、格林莱恩和国家妇女医院的所有患者进行现患率研究。采用医院感染的标准定义。
932例患者中有110例(12%)发生了129例医院感染:27例(20%)手术部位感染;25例(19%)下呼吸道感染;23例(18%)皮肤/软组织感染;19例(15%)尿路感染;14例(11%)血流感染;21例(17%)其他感染。主要病原体为:金黄色葡萄球菌(29%)、大肠杆菌(21%)、其他革兰阴性杆菌(14%)、铜绿假单胞菌(6%)、链球菌(6%)和白色念珠菌(6%)。国家妇女医院的医院感染患病率(5%)低于格林莱恩医院或奥克兰医院(分别为15%和14%),p<0.01。内科和外科患者的医院感染患病率相同,分别为394例中的53例(14%)和297例中的42例(14%)。患病率最高的是重症监护病房患者,31例中有7例(23%)。医院感染患病率随患者年龄增加而升高,17 - 50岁患者为8%,>50岁患者为14%,p<0.01;住院时间<2天的患者为2%,2 - 7天的患者为6%,>7天的患者为22%,p<0.01。许多患者存在医院感染的危险因素:339例(36%)患者有静脉导管;268例(29%)患者在本次住院期间接受了手术;122例(13%)患者有导尿管;122例(13%)患者有其他侵入性装置。
我们的结果与海外类似规模的医院相当。本研究为未来的研究提供了基线,有助于监测随时间的趋势以及重点感染控制措施的影响。