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Hospital-acquired infection

A hospital-acquired infection, also known as a nosocomial infection (from the Greek nosokomeion, meaning "hospital"), is an infection that is acquired in a hospital or other healthcare facility.[1] To emphasize both hospital and nonhospital settings, it is sometimes instead called a healthcare-associated infection.[2] Such an infection can be acquired in hospital, nursing home, rehabilitation facility, outpatient clinic, diagnostic laboratory or other clinical settings. A number of dynamic processes can bring contamination into operating rooms and other areas within nosocomial settings. [3][4] Infection is spread to the susceptible patient in the clinical setting by various means. Healthcare staff also spread infection, in addition to contaminated equipment, bed linens, or air droplets. The infection can originate from the outside environment, another infected patient, staff that may be infected, or in some cases, the source of the infection cannot be determined. In some cases the microorganism originates from the patient's own skin microbiota, becoming opportunistic after surgery or other procedures that compromise the protective skin barrier. Though the patient may have contracted the infection from their own skin, the infection is still considered nosocomial since it develops in the health care setting.[5] Nosocomial infection tends to lack evidence that it was present when the patient entered the healthcare setting, thus meaning it was acquired post-admission.[5][6]

Nosocomial infection
Other namesHAI (Healthcare-Associated Infections)
Contaminated surfaces increase cross-transmission
SpecialtyInfectious disease

Effects Edit

During 2002 in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that roughly 1.7 million healthcare-associated infections, from all types of microorganisms, including bacteria and fungi combined, caused or contributed to 99,000 deaths.[7] In Europe, where hospital surveys have been conducted, the category of gram-negative infections are estimated to account for two-thirds of the 25,000 deaths each year.[8] Nosocomial infections can cause severe pneumonia and infections of the urinary tract, bloodstream and other parts of the body.[9][10] Many types display antimicrobial resistance, which can complicate treatment.[citation needed]

In the UK about 300,000 patients were affected in 2017, and this was estimated to cost the NHS about £1 billion a year.[11]

Types Edit

Organisms Edit

Cause Edit

Transmission Edit

In-dwelling catheters have recently been identified with hospital acquired infections.[13] To deal with this complication, procedures are used, called intravascular antimicrobial lock therapy, that can reduce infections that are unexposed to blood-borne antibiotics.[14] Introducing antibiotics, including ethanol, into the catheter (without flushing it into the bloodstream) reduces the formation of biofilms.[12]

Main routes of transmission
Route Description
Contact transmission The most important and frequent mode of transmission of nosocomial infections is by direct contact.
Droplet transmission Transmission occurs when droplets containing microbes from the infected person are propelled a short distance through the air and deposited on the patient's body; droplets are generated from the source person mainly by coughing, sneezing, and talking, and during the performance of certain procedures, such as bronchoscopy.
Airborne transmission Dissemination can be either airborne droplet nuclei (small-particle residue {5 µm or smaller in size} of evaporated droplets containing microorganisms that remain suspended in the air for long periods of time) or dust particles containing the infectious agent. Microorganisms carried in this manner can be dispersed widely by air currents and may become inhaled by a susceptible host within the same room or over a longer distance from the source patient, depending on environmental factors; therefore, special air-handling and ventilation are required to prevent airborne transmission. Microorganisms transmitted by airborne transmission include Legionella, Mycobacterium tuberculosis and the rubeola and varicella viruses.
Common vehicle transmission This applies to microorganisms transmitted to the host by contaminated items, such as food, water, medications, devices, and equipment.
Vector borne transmission This occurs when vectors such as mosquitoes, flies, rats, and other vermin transmit microorganisms.

Contact transmission is divided into two subgroups: direct-contact transmission and indirect-contact transmission.

Routes of contact transmission
Route Description
Direct-contact transmission This involves a direct body surface-to-body surface contact and physical transfer of microorganisms between a susceptible host and an infected or colonized person, such as when a person turns a patient, gives a patient a bath, or performs other patient-care activities that require direct personal contact. Direct-contact transmission also can occur between two patients, with one serving as the source of the infectious microorganisms and the other as a susceptible host.
Indirect-contact transmission This involves contact of a susceptible host with a contaminated intermediate object, usually inanimate, such as contaminated instruments, needles, or dressings, or contaminated gloves that are not changed between patients. In addition, the improper use of saline flush syringes, vials, and bags has been implicated in disease transmission in the US, even when healthcare workers had access to gloves, disposable needles, intravenous devices, and flushes.[15]

Patient susceptibility Edit

Alongside reducing vectors for transmission, patient susceptibility to hospital-acquired infection needs to be considered. Factors which render patients at greater risk of infections include:

  1. Receipt of immunosuppressive medications such as glucocorticoids[16] or immunosuppressive drugs as part of treatments for cancer, organ transplantation or autoimmune diseases
  2. Impaired immunity due to diseases such as haematological malignancy, primary immunodeficiency, HIV/AIDS or critical illness,[17] including severe COVID-19[16][18]
  3. Presence of indwelling devices which breach natural defences, including endotracheal tubes, central venous catheters and urinary catheters.
  4. The use of antibiotics does not, itself, increase risk of hospital-acquired infections, but does contribute to the prevalence of Antimicrobial resistant organisms amongst patients with hospital-acquired infections[19]

Device-associated infections Edit

Given the association between invasive devices and hospital-acquired infections, specific terms are used to delineate such infections to allow for monitoring and prevention. Noted device-associated infections include ventilator-associated pneumonia, catheter-associated blood stream infections, catheter-associated urinary tract infections and device-associated ventriculitis. Surveillance for these infections is commonly undertaken and reported by bodies such as the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.[citation needed]

Prevention Edit

 

Controlling nosocomial infection is to implement QA/QC measures to the health care sectors, and evidence-based management can be a feasible approach. For those with ventilator-associated or hospital-acquired pneumonia, controlling and monitoring hospital indoor air quality needs to be on agenda in management,[20] whereas for nosocomial rotavirus infection, a hand hygiene protocol has to be enforced.[21][22][23]

To reduce the number of hospital-acquired infections, the state of Maryland implemented the Maryland Hospital-Acquired Conditions Program that provides financial rewards and penalties for individual hospitals. An adaptation of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services payment policy causes poor-performing hospitals to lose up to 3% of their inpatient revenues, whereas hospitals that are able to decrease hospital-acquired infections can earn up to 3% in rewards. During the program's first two years, complication rates fell by 15.26% across all hospital-acquired conditions tracked by the state (including those not covered by the program), from a risk-adjusted complication rate of 2.38 per 1,000 people in 2009 to a rate of 2.02 in 2011. The 15.26% decline translates into more than $100 million in cost savings for the health care system in Maryland, with the largest savings coming from avoidance of urinary tract infections, sepsis and other severe infections, and pneumonia and other lung infections. If similar results could be achieved nationwide, the Medicare program would save an estimated $1.3 billion over two years, while the US health care system as a whole would save $5.3 billion.[24]

Sanitation Edit

Hospitals have sanitation protocols regarding uniforms, equipment sterilization, washing, and other preventive measures. Thorough hand washing and/or use of alcohol rubs by all medical personnel before and after each patient contact is one of the most effective ways to combat nosocomial infections.[25] More careful use of antimicrobial agents, such as antibiotics, is also considered vital.[26] As many hospital-acquired infections caused by bacteria such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus, and Clostridium difficile are caused by a breach of these protocols, it is common that affected patients make medical negligence claims against the hospital in question.[27]

Sanitizing surfaces is part of control measures to reduce nosocomial infections in health care environments. Modern sanitizing methods such as Non-flammable Alcohol Vapor in Carbon Dioxide systems have been effective against gastroenteritis, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, and influenza agents. Use of hydrogen peroxide vapor has been clinically proven to reduce infection rates and risk of acquisition. Hydrogen peroxide is effective against endospore-forming bacteria, such as Clostridium difficile, where alcohol has been shown to be ineffective.[28][non-primary source needed] Ultraviolet cleaning devices may also be used to disinfect the rooms of patients infected with Clostridium difficile or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus after discharge.[29][non-primary source needed]

Despite sanitation protocol, patients cannot be entirely isolated from infectious agents. Furthermore, patients are often prescribed antibiotics and other antimicrobial drugs to help treat illness; this may increase the selection pressure for the emergence of resistant strains.[30]

Sterilization Edit

Sterilization goes further than just sanitizing. It kills all microorganisms on equipment and surfaces through exposure to chemicals, ionizing radiation, dry heat, or steam under pressure.[31]

Isolation Edit

Isolation is the implementation of isolating precautions designed to prevent transmission of microorganisms by common routes in hospitals. (See Universal precautions and Transmission-based precautions.) Because agent and host factors are more difficult to control, interruption of transfer of microorganisms is directed primarily at transmission for example isolation of infectious cases in special hospitals and isolation of patient with infected wounds in special rooms also isolation of joint transplantation patients on specific rooms.[citation needed]

Handwashing Edit

Handwashing frequently is called the single most important measure to reduce the risks of transmitting skin microorganisms from one person to another or from one site to another on the same patient. Washing hands as promptly and thoroughly as possible between patient contacts and after contact with blood, body fluids, secretions, excretions, and equipment or articles contaminated by them is an important component of infection control and isolation precautions. The spread of nosocomial infections, among immunocompromised patients is connected with health care workers' hand contamination in almost 40% of cases, and is a challenging problem in the modern hospitals. The best way for workers to overcome this problem is conducting correct hand-hygiene procedures; this is why the WHO launched in 2005 the GLOBAL Patient Safety Challenge.[32]

Two categories of micro-organisms can be present on health care workers' hands: transient flora and resident flora. The first is represented by the micro-organisms taken by workers from the environment, and the bacteria in it are capable of surviving on the human skin and sometimes to grow. The second group is represented by the permanent micro-organisms living on the skin surface (on the stratum corneum or immediately under it). They are capable of surviving on the human skin and to grow freely on it. They have low pathogenicity and infection rate, and they create a kind of protection from the colonization from other more pathogenic bacteria. The skin of workers is colonized by 3.9 × 104 – 4.6 × 106 cfu/cm2. The microbes comprising the resident flora are: Staphylococcus epidermidis, Staphylococcus hominis, and Microccocus, Propionibacterium, Corynebacterium, Dermobacterium, and Pitosporum spp., while transient organisms are Staphylococcus aureus, and Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Acinetobacter, Enterobacter and Candida spp. The goal of hand hygiene is to eliminate the transient flora with a careful and proper performance of hand washing, using different kinds of soap, (normal and antiseptic), and alcohol-based gels. The main problems found in the practice of hand hygiene is connected with the lack of available sinks and time-consuming performance of hand washing. An easy way to resolve this problem could be the use of alcohol-based hand rubs, because of faster application compared to correct hand-washing.[33]

Improving patient hand washing has also been shown to reduce the rate of nosocomial infection. Patients who are bed-bound often do not have as much access to clean their hands at mealtimes or after touching surfaces or handling waste such as tissues. By reinforcing the importance of handwashing and providing sanitizing gel or wipes within reach of the bed, nurses were directly able to reduce infection rates. A study published in 2017 demonstrated this by improving patient education on both proper hand-washing procedure and important times to use sanitizer and successfully reduced the rate of enterococci and Staphylococcus aureus.[34]

All visitors must follow the same procedures as hospital staff to adequately control the spread of infections. Moreover, multidrug-resistant infections can leave the hospital and become part of the community flora if steps are not taken to stop this transmission.[citation needed]

It is unclear whether or not nail polish or rings affected surgical wound infection rates.[35]

Gloves Edit

In addition to hand washing, gloves play an important role in reducing the risks of transmission of microorganisms. Gloves are worn for three important reasons in hospitals. First, they are worn to provide a protective barrier for personnel, preventing large scale contamination of the hands when touching blood, body fluids, secretions, excretions, mucous membranes, and non-intact skin. In the United States, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has mandated wearing gloves to reduce the risk of bloodborne pathogen infections.[36] Second, gloves are worn to reduce the likelihood that microorganisms present on the hands of personnel will be transmitted to patients during invasive or other patient-care procedures that involve touching a patient's mucous membranes and nonintact skin. Third, they are worn to reduce the likelihood that the hands of personnel contaminated with micro-organisms from a patient or a fomite can transmit those micro-organisms to another patient. In this situation, gloves must be changed between patient contacts, and hands should be washed after gloves are removed.[citation needed]

Antimicrobial surfaces Edit

Micro-organisms are known to survive on inanimate "touch" surfaces for extended periods of time.[37][38] This can be especially troublesome in hospital environments where immunodeficient patients are at enhanced risk for contracting nosocomial infections. Patients with hospital-acquired infections are predominantly hospitalized in different types of intensive care units (ICUs).[39]

Touch surfaces commonly found in hospital rooms, such as bed rails, call buttons, touch plates, chairs, door handles, light switches, grab rails, intravenous poles, dispensers (alcohol gel, paper towel, soap), dressing trolleys, and counter and table tops are known to be contaminated with Staphylococcus, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (one of the most virulent strains of antibiotic-resistant bacteria) and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus.[40] Objects in closest proximity to patients have the highest levels of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus. This is why touch surfaces in hospital rooms can serve as sources, or reservoirs, for the spread of bacteria from the hands of healthcare workers and visitors to patients.[citation needed]

A number of compounds can decrease the risk of bacteria growing on surfaces including: copper, silver, and germicides.[41]

There have been a number of studies evaluating the use of no-touch cleaning systems particularly the use of ultraviolet C devices. One review was inconclusive due to lack of, or of poor quality evidence.[42] Other reviews have found some evidence, and growing evidence of their effectiveness.[43][44]

Treatment Edit

Two of the bacteria species most likely to infect patients are the Gram-positive strains of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, and Gram-negative Acinetobacter baumannii. While antibiotic drugs to treat diseases caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus are available, few effective drugs are available for Acinetobacter. Acinetobacter bacteria are evolving and becoming immune to antibiotics, so in many cases, polymyxin-type antibacterials need to be used. "In many respects it's far worse than MRSA", said a specialist at Case Western Reserve University.[45]

Another growing disease, especially prevalent in New York City hospitals, is the drug-resistant, Gram-negative Klebsiella pneumoniae. An estimated more than 20% of the Klebsiella infections in Brooklyn hospitals "are now resistant to virtually all modern antibiotics, and those supergerms are now spreading worldwide."[45]

The bacteria, classified as Gram-negative because of their color on the Gram stain, can cause severe pneumonia and infections of the urinary tract, bloodstream, and other parts of the body. Their cell structures make them more difficult to attack with antibiotics than Gram-positive organisms like methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. In some cases, antibiotic resistance is spreading to Gram-negative bacteria that can infect people outside the hospital. "For gram-positives we need better drugs; for gram-negatives we need any drugs", said Brad Spellberg, an infectious-disease specialist at Harbor–UCLA Medical Center, and the author of Rising Plague, a book about drug-resistant pathogens.[45]

Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) is the second most common nosocomial infection and accounts for approximately one-fourth of all infections in the intensive care unit (ICU).[46] HAP, or nosocomial pneumonia, is a lower respiratory infection that was not incubating at the time of hospital admission and that presents clinically two or more days after hospitalization.[47] Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is defined as HAP in patients receiving mechanical ventilation. The incidence of VAP is 10–30% among patients who require mechanical ventilation for >48 h.[48] A standard treatment protocol is based on accurate diagnosis definitions, microbiological confirmation of VAP, and the administration of imipenem plus ciprofloxacin as initial empirical antibiotic treatment.[49]

One-third of nosocomial infections are considered preventable. The CDC estimates 687,000 people in the United States were infected by hospital-acquired infections in 2015, resulting in 72,000 deaths.[50] The most common nosocomial infections are of the urinary tract, surgical site and various pneumonias.[7]

An alternative treatment targeting localised infections is the use of irradiation by ultraviolet C.[51]

Epidemiology Edit

The methods used differ from country to country (definitions used, type of nosocomial infections covered, health units surveyed, inclusion or exclusion of imported infections, etc.), so the international comparisons of nosocomial infection rates should be made with the utmost care.[citation needed]

Belgium Edit

In Belgium the prevalence of nosocomial infections is about 6.2%. Annually about 125,500 patients become infected by a nosocomial infection, resulting in almost 3000 deaths. The extra costs for the health insurance are estimated to be approximately €400 million/year.[52]

France Edit

Estimates ranged from 6.7% in 1990 to 7.4% (patients may have several infections).[53] At national level, prevalence among patients in health care facilities was 6.7% in 1996,[54] 5.9% in 2001[55] and 5.0% in 2006.[56] The rates for nosocomial infections were 7.6% in 1996, 6.4% in 2001 and 5.4% in 2006.[citation needed]

In 2006, the most common infection sites were urinary tract infections (30.3%), pneumopathy (14.7%), infections of surgery site (14.2%). Infections of the skin and mucous membrane (10.2%), other respiratory infections (6.8%) and bacterial infections / blood poisoning (6.4%).[57] The rates among adult patients in intensive care were 13.5% in 2004, 14.6% in 2005, 14.1% in 2006 and 14.4% in 2007.[58]

Nosocomial infections are estimated to make patients stay in the hospital four to five additional days. Around 2004–2005, about 9,000 people died each year with a nosocomial infection, of which about 4,200 would have survived without this infection.[59]

Finland Edit

Rate was estimated at 8.5% of patients in 2005.[60]

Italy Edit

Since 2000, estimates show about a 6.7% infection rate, i.e. between 450,000 and 700,000 patients, which caused between 4,500 and 7,000 deaths.[61] A survey in Lombardy gave a rate of 4.9% of patients in 2000.[62]

Switzerland Edit

Estimates range between 2 and 14%.[63] A national survey gave a rate of 7.2% in 2004.[64]

United Kingdom Edit

In 2012, the Health Protection Agency reported the prevalence rate of hospital-acquired infections in England was 6.4% in 2011, against a rate of 8.2% in 2006,[65] with respiratory tract, urinary tract and surgical site infections the most common types of infections reported.[65] In 2018, it was reported that in-hospital infections had risen from 5,972 in 2008 to 48,815 in 2017.[66]

United States Edit

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated roughly 1.7 million hospital-associated infections, from all types of bacteria combined, cause or contribute to 99,000 deaths each year.[67] Other estimates indicate 10%, or 2 million, patients a year become infected, with the annual cost ranging from $4.5 billion to $11 billion.[68] In the US, the most frequent type of hospital infection is urinary tract infection (36%), followed by surgical site infection (20%), and bloodstream infection and pneumonia (both 11%).[45][needs update]

History Edit

 
Mortality rates 1841–1846 in two clinics documented by Semmelweis

In 1841, Ignaz Semmelweis, a Hungarian obstetrician was working at a Vienna maternity hospital. He was "shocked" by the death rate of women who developed puerperal fever. He documented that mortality was three times higher in the ward where the medical students were delivering babies than in the next ward that was staffed by midwifery students.[69] The medical students were also routinely working with cadavers. He compared the rates of infection with a similar hospital in Dublin, Ireland, and hypothesized that it was the medical students who somehow were infecting the women after labor. He instituted mandatory hand-washing in May 1847 and infection rates dropped dramatically. Louis Pasteur proposed the germ theory of disease and began his work on cholera in 1865 by identifying that it was microorganisms that were associated with disease.[70][71]

See also Edit

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External links Edit

  •   The dictionary definition of nosocomial at Wiktionary

hospital, acquired, infection, hospital, acquired, infection, also, known, nosocomial, infection, from, greek, nosokomeion, meaning, hospital, infection, that, acquired, hospital, other, healthcare, facility, emphasize, both, hospital, nonhospital, settings, s. A hospital acquired infection also known as a nosocomial infection from the Greek nosokomeion meaning hospital is an infection that is acquired in a hospital or other healthcare facility 1 To emphasize both hospital and nonhospital settings it is sometimes instead called a healthcare associated infection 2 Such an infection can be acquired in hospital nursing home rehabilitation facility outpatient clinic diagnostic laboratory or other clinical settings A number of dynamic processes can bring contamination into operating rooms and other areas within nosocomial settings 3 4 Infection is spread to the susceptible patient in the clinical setting by various means Healthcare staff also spread infection in addition to contaminated equipment bed linens or air droplets The infection can originate from the outside environment another infected patient staff that may be infected or in some cases the source of the infection cannot be determined In some cases the microorganism originates from the patient s own skin microbiota becoming opportunistic after surgery or other procedures that compromise the protective skin barrier Though the patient may have contracted the infection from their own skin the infection is still considered nosocomial since it develops in the health care setting 5 Nosocomial infection tends to lack evidence that it was present when the patient entered the healthcare setting thus meaning it was acquired post admission 5 6 Nosocomial infectionOther namesHAI Healthcare Associated Infections Contaminated surfaces increase cross transmissionSpecialtyInfectious disease Contents 1 Effects 2 Types 2 1 Organisms 3 Cause 3 1 Transmission 3 1 1 Patient susceptibility 3 1 2 Device associated infections 4 Prevention 4 1 Sanitation 4 2 Sterilization 4 3 Isolation 4 4 Handwashing 4 5 Gloves 4 6 Antimicrobial surfaces 5 Treatment 6 Epidemiology 6 1 Belgium 6 2 France 6 3 Finland 6 4 Italy 6 5 Switzerland 6 6 United Kingdom 6 7 United States 7 History 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEffects EditDuring 2002 in the United States the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that roughly 1 7 million healthcare associated infections from all types of microorganisms including bacteria and fungi combined caused or contributed to 99 000 deaths 7 In Europe where hospital surveys have been conducted the category of gram negative infections are estimated to account for two thirds of the 25 000 deaths each year 8 Nosocomial infections can cause severe pneumonia and infections of the urinary tract bloodstream and other parts of the body 9 10 Many types display antimicrobial resistance which can complicate treatment citation needed In the UK about 300 000 patients were affected in 2017 and this was estimated to cost the NHS about 1 billion a year 11 Types EditHospital acquired pneumonia Ventilator associated pneumonia Urinary tract infection Gastroenteritis Puerperal fever Central line associated blood stream infection Organisms Edit Staphylococcus aureus Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus 12 Candida albicans 12 Pseudomonas aeruginosa 12 Acinetobacter baumannii 12 Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Clostridium difficile Escherichia coli 12 Tuberculosis Vancomycin resistant Enterococcus Legionnaires diseaseCause EditTransmission Edit In dwelling catheters have recently been identified with hospital acquired infections 13 To deal with this complication procedures are used called intravascular antimicrobial lock therapy that can reduce infections that are unexposed to blood borne antibiotics 14 Introducing antibiotics including ethanol into the catheter without flushing it into the bloodstream reduces the formation of biofilms 12 Main routes of transmission Route DescriptionContact transmission The most important and frequent mode of transmission of nosocomial infections is by direct contact Droplet transmission Transmission occurs when droplets containing microbes from the infected person are propelled a short distance through the air and deposited on the patient s body droplets are generated from the source person mainly by coughing sneezing and talking and during the performance of certain procedures such as bronchoscopy Airborne transmission Dissemination can be either airborne droplet nuclei small particle residue 5 µm or smaller in size of evaporated droplets containing microorganisms that remain suspended in the air for long periods of time or dust particles containing the infectious agent Microorganisms carried in this manner can be dispersed widely by air currents and may become inhaled by a susceptible host within the same room or over a longer distance from the source patient depending on environmental factors therefore special air handling and ventilation are required to prevent airborne transmission Microorganisms transmitted by airborne transmission include Legionella Mycobacterium tuberculosis and the rubeola and varicella viruses Common vehicle transmission This applies to microorganisms transmitted to the host by contaminated items such as food water medications devices and equipment Vector borne transmission This occurs when vectors such as mosquitoes flies rats and other vermin transmit microorganisms Contact transmission is divided into two subgroups direct contact transmission and indirect contact transmission Routes of contact transmission Route DescriptionDirect contact transmission This involves a direct body surface to body surface contact and physical transfer of microorganisms between a susceptible host and an infected or colonized person such as when a person turns a patient gives a patient a bath or performs other patient care activities that require direct personal contact Direct contact transmission also can occur between two patients with one serving as the source of the infectious microorganisms and the other as a susceptible host Indirect contact transmission This involves contact of a susceptible host with a contaminated intermediate object usually inanimate such as contaminated instruments needles or dressings or contaminated gloves that are not changed between patients In addition the improper use of saline flush syringes vials and bags has been implicated in disease transmission in the US even when healthcare workers had access to gloves disposable needles intravenous devices and flushes 15 Patient susceptibility Edit Alongside reducing vectors for transmission patient susceptibility to hospital acquired infection needs to be considered Factors which render patients at greater risk of infections include Receipt of immunosuppressive medications such as glucocorticoids 16 or immunosuppressive drugs as part of treatments for cancer organ transplantation or autoimmune diseases Impaired immunity due to diseases such as haematological malignancy primary immunodeficiency HIV AIDS or critical illness 17 including severe COVID 19 16 18 Presence of indwelling devices which breach natural defences including endotracheal tubes central venous catheters and urinary catheters The use of antibiotics does not itself increase risk of hospital acquired infections but does contribute to the prevalence of Antimicrobial resistant organisms amongst patients with hospital acquired infections 19 Device associated infections Edit Given the association between invasive devices and hospital acquired infections specific terms are used to delineate such infections to allow for monitoring and prevention Noted device associated infections include ventilator associated pneumonia catheter associated blood stream infections catheter associated urinary tract infections and device associated ventriculitis Surveillance for these infections is commonly undertaken and reported by bodies such as the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention citation needed Prevention Edit nbsp Controlling nosocomial infection is to implement QA QC measures to the health care sectors and evidence based management can be a feasible approach For those with ventilator associated or hospital acquired pneumonia controlling and monitoring hospital indoor air quality needs to be on agenda in management 20 whereas for nosocomial rotavirus infection a hand hygiene protocol has to be enforced 21 22 23 To reduce the number of hospital acquired infections the state of Maryland implemented the Maryland Hospital Acquired Conditions Program that provides financial rewards and penalties for individual hospitals An adaptation of the Centers for Medicare amp Medicaid Services payment policy causes poor performing hospitals to lose up to 3 of their inpatient revenues whereas hospitals that are able to decrease hospital acquired infections can earn up to 3 in rewards During the program s first two years complication rates fell by 15 26 across all hospital acquired conditions tracked by the state including those not covered by the program from a risk adjusted complication rate of 2 38 per 1 000 people in 2009 to a rate of 2 02 in 2011 The 15 26 decline translates into more than 100 million in cost savings for the health care system in Maryland with the largest savings coming from avoidance of urinary tract infections sepsis and other severe infections and pneumonia and other lung infections If similar results could be achieved nationwide the Medicare program would save an estimated 1 3 billion over two years while the US health care system as a whole would save 5 3 billion 24 Sanitation Edit Hospitals have sanitation protocols regarding uniforms equipment sterilization washing and other preventive measures Thorough hand washing and or use of alcohol rubs by all medical personnel before and after each patient contact is one of the most effective ways to combat nosocomial infections 25 More careful use of antimicrobial agents such as antibiotics is also considered vital 26 As many hospital acquired infections caused by bacteria such as methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus methicillin susceptible Staphylococcus aureus and Clostridium difficile are caused by a breach of these protocols it is common that affected patients make medical negligence claims against the hospital in question 27 Sanitizing surfaces is part of control measures to reduce nosocomial infections in health care environments Modern sanitizing methods such as Non flammable Alcohol Vapor in Carbon Dioxide systems have been effective against gastroenteritis methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus and influenza agents Use of hydrogen peroxide vapor has been clinically proven to reduce infection rates and risk of acquisition Hydrogen peroxide is effective against endospore forming bacteria such as Clostridium difficile where alcohol has been shown to be ineffective 28 non primary source needed Ultraviolet cleaning devices may also be used to disinfect the rooms of patients infected with Clostridium difficile or methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus after discharge 29 non primary source needed Despite sanitation protocol patients cannot be entirely isolated from infectious agents Furthermore patients are often prescribed antibiotics and other antimicrobial drugs to help treat illness this may increase the selection pressure for the emergence of resistant strains 30 Sterilization Edit Sterilization goes further than just sanitizing It kills all microorganisms on equipment and surfaces through exposure to chemicals ionizing radiation dry heat or steam under pressure 31 Isolation Edit Main article Isolation health care Isolation is the implementation of isolating precautions designed to prevent transmission of microorganisms by common routes in hospitals See Universal precautions and Transmission based precautions Because agent and host factors are more difficult to control interruption of transfer of microorganisms is directed primarily at transmission for example isolation of infectious cases in special hospitals and isolation of patient with infected wounds in special rooms also isolation of joint transplantation patients on specific rooms citation needed Handwashing Edit Handwashing frequently is called the single most important measure to reduce the risks of transmitting skin microorganisms from one person to another or from one site to another on the same patient Washing hands as promptly and thoroughly as possible between patient contacts and after contact with blood body fluids secretions excretions and equipment or articles contaminated by them is an important component of infection control and isolation precautions The spread of nosocomial infections among immunocompromised patients is connected with health care workers hand contamination in almost 40 of cases and is a challenging problem in the modern hospitals The best way for workers to overcome this problem is conducting correct hand hygiene procedures this is why the WHO launched in 2005 the GLOBAL Patient Safety Challenge 32 Two categories of micro organisms can be present on health care workers hands transient flora and resident flora The first is represented by the micro organisms taken by workers from the environment and the bacteria in it are capable of surviving on the human skin and sometimes to grow The second group is represented by the permanent micro organisms living on the skin surface on the stratum corneum or immediately under it They are capable of surviving on the human skin and to grow freely on it They have low pathogenicity and infection rate and they create a kind of protection from the colonization from other more pathogenic bacteria The skin of workers is colonized by 3 9 104 4 6 106 cfu cm2 The microbes comprising the resident flora are Staphylococcus epidermidis Staphylococcus hominis and Microccocus Propionibacterium Corynebacterium Dermobacterium and Pitosporum spp while transient organisms are Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella pneumoniae and Acinetobacter Enterobacter and Candida spp The goal of hand hygiene is to eliminate the transient flora with a careful and proper performance of hand washing using different kinds of soap normal and antiseptic and alcohol based gels The main problems found in the practice of hand hygiene is connected with the lack of available sinks and time consuming performance of hand washing An easy way to resolve this problem could be the use of alcohol based hand rubs because of faster application compared to correct hand washing 33 Improving patient hand washing has also been shown to reduce the rate of nosocomial infection Patients who are bed bound often do not have as much access to clean their hands at mealtimes or after touching surfaces or handling waste such as tissues By reinforcing the importance of handwashing and providing sanitizing gel or wipes within reach of the bed nurses were directly able to reduce infection rates A study published in 2017 demonstrated this by improving patient education on both proper hand washing procedure and important times to use sanitizer and successfully reduced the rate of enterococci and Staphylococcus aureus 34 All visitors must follow the same procedures as hospital staff to adequately control the spread of infections Moreover multidrug resistant infections can leave the hospital and become part of the community flora if steps are not taken to stop this transmission citation needed It is unclear whether or not nail polish or rings affected surgical wound infection rates 35 Gloves Edit In addition to hand washing gloves play an important role in reducing the risks of transmission of microorganisms Gloves are worn for three important reasons in hospitals First they are worn to provide a protective barrier for personnel preventing large scale contamination of the hands when touching blood body fluids secretions excretions mucous membranes and non intact skin In the United States the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has mandated wearing gloves to reduce the risk of bloodborne pathogen infections 36 Second gloves are worn to reduce the likelihood that microorganisms present on the hands of personnel will be transmitted to patients during invasive or other patient care procedures that involve touching a patient s mucous membranes and nonintact skin Third they are worn to reduce the likelihood that the hands of personnel contaminated with micro organisms from a patient or a fomite can transmit those micro organisms to another patient In this situation gloves must be changed between patient contacts and hands should be washed after gloves are removed citation needed Antimicrobial surfaces Edit Micro organisms are known to survive on inanimate touch surfaces for extended periods of time 37 38 This can be especially troublesome in hospital environments where immunodeficient patients are at enhanced risk for contracting nosocomial infections Patients with hospital acquired infections are predominantly hospitalized in different types of intensive care units ICUs 39 Touch surfaces commonly found in hospital rooms such as bed rails call buttons touch plates chairs door handles light switches grab rails intravenous poles dispensers alcohol gel paper towel soap dressing trolleys and counter and table tops are known to be contaminated with Staphylococcus methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus one of the most virulent strains of antibiotic resistant bacteria and vancomycin resistant Enterococcus 40 Objects in closest proximity to patients have the highest levels of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus and vancomycin resistant Enterococcus This is why touch surfaces in hospital rooms can serve as sources or reservoirs for the spread of bacteria from the hands of healthcare workers and visitors to patients citation needed A number of compounds can decrease the risk of bacteria growing on surfaces including copper silver and germicides 41 There have been a number of studies evaluating the use of no touch cleaning systems particularly the use of ultraviolet C devices One review was inconclusive due to lack of or of poor quality evidence 42 Other reviews have found some evidence and growing evidence of their effectiveness 43 44 Treatment EditTwo of the bacteria species most likely to infect patients are the Gram positive strains of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Gram negative Acinetobacter baumannii While antibiotic drugs to treat diseases caused by methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus are available few effective drugs are available for Acinetobacter Acinetobacter bacteria are evolving and becoming immune to antibiotics so in many cases polymyxin type antibacterials need to be used In many respects it s far worse than MRSA said a specialist at Case Western Reserve University 45 Another growing disease especially prevalent in New York City hospitals is the drug resistant Gram negative Klebsiella pneumoniae An estimated more than 20 of the Klebsiella infections in Brooklyn hospitals are now resistant to virtually all modern antibiotics and those supergerms are now spreading worldwide 45 The bacteria classified as Gram negative because of their color on the Gram stain can cause severe pneumonia and infections of the urinary tract bloodstream and other parts of the body Their cell structures make them more difficult to attack with antibiotics than Gram positive organisms like methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus In some cases antibiotic resistance is spreading to Gram negative bacteria that can infect people outside the hospital For gram positives we need better drugs for gram negatives we need any drugs said Brad Spellberg an infectious disease specialist at Harbor UCLA Medical Center and the author of Rising Plague a book about drug resistant pathogens 45 Hospital acquired pneumonia HAP is the second most common nosocomial infection and accounts for approximately one fourth of all infections in the intensive care unit ICU 46 HAP or nosocomial pneumonia is a lower respiratory infection that was not incubating at the time of hospital admission and that presents clinically two or more days after hospitalization 47 Ventilator associated pneumonia VAP is defined as HAP in patients receiving mechanical ventilation The incidence of VAP is 10 30 among patients who require mechanical ventilation for gt 48 h 48 A standard treatment protocol is based on accurate diagnosis definitions microbiological confirmation of VAP and the administration of imipenem plus ciprofloxacin as initial empirical antibiotic treatment 49 One third of nosocomial infections are considered preventable The CDC estimates 687 000 people in the United States were infected by hospital acquired infections in 2015 resulting in 72 000 deaths 50 The most common nosocomial infections are of the urinary tract surgical site and various pneumonias 7 An alternative treatment targeting localised infections is the use of irradiation by ultraviolet C 51 Epidemiology EditThe methods used differ from country to country definitions used type of nosocomial infections covered health units surveyed inclusion or exclusion of imported infections etc so the international comparisons of nosocomial infection rates should be made with the utmost care citation needed Belgium Edit In Belgium the prevalence of nosocomial infections is about 6 2 Annually about 125 500 patients become infected by a nosocomial infection resulting in almost 3000 deaths The extra costs for the health insurance are estimated to be approximately 400 million year 52 France Edit Estimates ranged from 6 7 in 1990 to 7 4 patients may have several infections 53 At national level prevalence among patients in health care facilities was 6 7 in 1996 54 5 9 in 2001 55 and 5 0 in 2006 56 The rates for nosocomial infections were 7 6 in 1996 6 4 in 2001 and 5 4 in 2006 citation needed In 2006 the most common infection sites were urinary tract infections 30 3 pneumopathy 14 7 infections of surgery site 14 2 Infections of the skin and mucous membrane 10 2 other respiratory infections 6 8 and bacterial infections blood poisoning 6 4 57 The rates among adult patients in intensive care were 13 5 in 2004 14 6 in 2005 14 1 in 2006 and 14 4 in 2007 58 Nosocomial infections are estimated to make patients stay in the hospital four to five additional days Around 2004 2005 about 9 000 people died each year with a nosocomial infection of which about 4 200 would have survived without this infection 59 Finland Edit Rate was estimated at 8 5 of patients in 2005 60 Italy Edit Since 2000 estimates show about a 6 7 infection rate i e between 450 000 and 700 000 patients which caused between 4 500 and 7 000 deaths 61 A survey in Lombardy gave a rate of 4 9 of patients in 2000 62 Switzerland Edit Estimates range between 2 and 14 63 A national survey gave a rate of 7 2 in 2004 64 United Kingdom Edit In 2012 the Health Protection Agency reported the prevalence rate of hospital acquired infections in England was 6 4 in 2011 against a rate of 8 2 in 2006 65 with respiratory tract urinary tract and surgical site infections the most common types of infections reported 65 In 2018 it was reported that in hospital infections had risen from 5 972 in 2008 to 48 815 in 2017 66 United States Edit The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC estimated roughly 1 7 million hospital associated infections from all types of bacteria combined cause or contribute to 99 000 deaths each year 67 Other estimates indicate 10 or 2 million patients a year become infected with the annual cost ranging from 4 5 billion to 11 billion 68 In the US the most frequent type of hospital infection is urinary tract infection 36 followed by surgical site infection 20 and bloodstream infection and pneumonia both 11 45 needs update History Edit nbsp Mortality rates 1841 1846 in two clinics documented by SemmelweisIn 1841 Ignaz Semmelweis a Hungarian obstetrician was working at a Vienna maternity hospital He was shocked by the death rate of women who developed puerperal fever He documented that mortality was three times higher in the ward where the medical students were delivering babies than in the next ward that was staffed by midwifery students 69 The medical students were also routinely working with cadavers He compared the rates of infection with a similar hospital in Dublin Ireland and hypothesized that it was the medical students who somehow were infecting the women after labor He instituted mandatory hand washing in May 1847 and infection rates dropped dramatically Louis Pasteur proposed the germ theory of disease and began his work on cholera in 1865 by identifying that it was microorganisms that were associated with disease 70 71 See also EditCubicle curtain ESKAPE Infection control Iatrogenesis Phototherapy Sanitation Standard Operating ProceduresReferences Edit Rosenthal Victor D Bijie Hu Maki Dennis G Mehta Yatin Apisarnthanarak Anucha Medeiros Eduardo A Leblebicioglu Hakan Fisher Dale Alvarez Moreno Carlos Khader Ilham Abu Martinez Marisela Del Rocio Gonzalez Cuellar Luis E Navoa Ng Josephine Anne Abouqal Redouane Garcell Humberto Guanche June 2012 International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium INICC report data summary of 36 countries for 2004 2009 PDF American Journal of Infection Control 40 5 396 407 doi 10 1016 j ajic 2011 05 020 PMID 21908073 HAI Data and Statistics cdc gov 2018 01 10 Retrieved 2018 01 13 Carroll Gregory T Kirschman David L Mammana Angela 2022 Increased CO2 levels in the operating room correlate with the number of healthcare workers present An imperative for intentional crowd control Patient Safety in Surgery 16 1 35 doi 10 1186 s13037 022 00343 8 PMC 9672642 PMID 36397098 S2CID 253556197 Carroll Gregory T Kirschman David L 2022 Discrete room pressure drops predict door openings and contamination levels in the operating room setting Perioperative Care and Operating Room Management 29 100291 doi 10 1016 j pcorm 2022 100291 S2CID 252640995 a b Monegro Alberto F 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17357358 Hospital acquired infection HAI diagnostics market is forecasted to reach 4 386 6 million by 2023 growing at a CAGR of 7 6 during 2017 2023 P amp S Intelligence Kadar N January 2019 Rediscovering Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis 1818 1865 Am J Obstet Gynecol 220 1 26 39 doi 10 1016 j ajog 2018 11 1084 PMID 30444981 S2CID 53567650 Pommerville Jeffrey 2014 Fundamentals of microbiology Burlington MA Jones amp Bartlett Learning ISBN 9781449647964 Wyklicky H Skopec M Sep Oct 1983 Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis the prophet of bacteriology Infect Control 4 5 367 70 doi 10 1017 S0195941700059762 PMID 6354955 S2CID 25830725 Archived from the original on 2008 04 04 Retrieved 2015 11 28 External links Edit nbsp The dictionary definition of nosocomial at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hospital acquired infection amp oldid 1172995921, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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