Goldrick B A
Georgetown University School of Nursing, Washington, DC, USA.
Am J Infect Control. 1999 Feb;27(1):4-9. doi: 10.1016/s0196-6553(99)70068-4.
In 1989 the Health Care Financing Administration mandated that long-term care facilities (LTCFs) maintain infection control programs; however, few data are available to guide the design of these programs. The purpose of this study was to assess the current status of infection control programs in LTCFs by using methodology adapted from Phase I of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Study on the Efficacy of Nosocomial Infection Control.
A descriptive study of infection control programs in skilled nursing LTCFs was undertaken in a representative sample of 136 New England skilled nursing LTCFs that have >/=25 beds, with use of a self-report Infection Surveillance and Control Questionnaire.
Nearly all (98%) the LTCFs reported having personnel responsible for infection control, with a median of 8 hours per week spent on infection control activities. Ninety percent of these persons were registered nurses; 52% had formal training in infection control. Twenty-five percent of the respondents reported that their infection control program was either "inactive" or nonexistent in 1988, and 60% rated their programs as either "moderately active" (43%) or "very active" (17%) during that year. By 1994, most LTCFs (67%) rated themselves as "very active," and only 3% as inactive or nonexistent. The mean scores on the questionnaire's surveillance and control indices were 23 (out of a possible 30) and 47 (out of a possible 60), respectively, which indicates medium infection surveillance and control activity. On the basis of the data provided by 72% of the respondents (n = 98), a crude estimate of 13.97 infections per 1000 resident-days was calculated, which is a higher rate than previously reported for LTCFs.
Findings from the study indicate that it is feasible to use methodology adapted from Phase I of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Study on the Efficacy of Nosocomial Infection Control to assess infection control programs in LTCFs; however, further research into the efficacy of nosocomial infection control in skilled nursing LTCFs is needed.
1989年,医疗保健财务管理局规定长期护理机构(LTCFs)需维持感染控制项目;然而,几乎没有数据可用于指导这些项目的设计。本研究的目的是通过采用源自疾病控制与预防中心医院感染控制效果研究第一阶段的方法,评估长期护理机构感染控制项目的现状。
对新英格兰地区136家床位≥25张的专业护理长期护理机构的感染控制项目进行描述性研究,采用自我报告的《感染监测与控制调查问卷》。
几乎所有(98%)长期护理机构报告有负责感染控制的人员,每周用于感染控制活动的时间中位数为8小时。这些人员中90%为注册护士;52%接受过感染控制方面的正规培训。25%的受访者报告其感染控制项目在1988年要么“不活跃”要么不存在,当年60%的受访者将其项目评为“中度活跃”(43%)或“非常活跃”(17%)。到1994年,大多数长期护理机构(67%)将自己评为“非常活跃”,只有3%评为不活跃或不存在。调查问卷的监测和控制指标的平均得分分别为23分(满分30分)和47分(满分60分),表明感染监测和控制活动处于中等水平。根据72%的受访者(n = 98)提供的数据,计算出每1000个居民日的感染粗略估计数为13.97例,这一感染率高于之前报道的长期护理机构的感染率。
该研究结果表明,采用源自疾病控制与预防中心医院感染控制效果研究第一阶段的方法来评估长期护理机构的感染控制项目是可行的;然而,需要进一步研究专业护理长期护理机构医院感染控制的效果。