Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9269408 Journal of Hospital Infection 2005 5 Pages PDF
Abstract
We evaluated the impact of the different components of a screening programme of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) carriers at hospital admission on the value of two risk-adjusted rates: the proportion of imported MRSA and an indicator of the MRSA colonization pressure (ICP), and the incidence of MRSA acquired and detected in our hospital. Indicators were calculated: (1) with no screening programme; (2) with a programme limited to the intensive care unit (ICU); (3) with a programme extended to patients with risk factors for MRSA carriage hospitalized in non-ICU wards. The programme included an automatic alert. Systematic sampling of patients with risk factors hospitalized in non-ICU settings detected nearly 50% of carriers at admission. The proportion of MRSA imported into our hospital varied from 35.4% without any screening programme to 71.8% when all components of our screening programme were considered (P<10−4). The ICP varied from 3.1% (31/985) with the complete programme to 10.4% (31/297) without any screening programme (P<10−6). Screening patients with risk factors for MRSA carriage hospitalized in non-ICU wards resulted in a 51% increase of the calculated proportion of imported strains and a 58% decrease of the ICP. The two studied indicators were strongly dependent on the screening strategy for MRSA carriers implemented at admission. The screening strategy for patients admitted to non-ICU wards who have risk factors for MRSA carriage seems to be the determinant for the interpretation of certain risk-adjusted indicators of MRSA cross-transmission. Comparisons of these indicators must consider the setting in which the screening programmes are implemented.
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Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
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