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Published byAlice Davidson Modified over 9 years ago
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Nosocomial infection Hospital Infection
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Hospital acquired infections Nosocomial infections are those that originate or occur in a hospital or hospital-like setting. Nosocomial infections are responsible for about 20,000 deaths in the U.S. per year. Approximately 10% of hospital patients acquire a clinically significant nosocomial infection.
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Classification CAI → hospital admission (pneumonia) Admission → infection (device-associated bacteraemia) Discharge → infections (Surgical site infection) Infection to hospital staff (Hepatitis B infection)
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Why hospital infections High prevalence of pathogens More compromised hosts Efficient mechanisms of transmission from patient to patient
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Presence of pathogens Nosocomial infections are primarily caused by opportunists, particularly b: Enterococcus spp. Escherichia coli Pseudomonas spp. Staphylococcus aureus
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Sites of nosocomial infections Most to least common: Urinary tract Surgical wounds Respiratory tract Skin (especially burns) Blood (bacteremia) Gastrointestinal tract Central nervous system
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Hospital microorganisms tend to acquire antibiotic resistance factors
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Normal microflora of HCW Pathogens become incorporated into the normal flora of hospital workers Nosocomial pathogens tend to be: Available for transmission to patients Not easily treated
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Compromised hosts Infants and elderly Pre- existing diseases Immuno-suppressive Radio therapy or Chemo therapy Splenectomy Broken skin and mucous membranes Surgery, insertion of catheters, tracheostomy, ventilators, …etc.
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Chain of transmission Many sick patients under one roof More efficient transmission
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Modes of transmission Direct person-to-person transmission: Infected patient, staff member, or visitor Indirect transmission through: Equipment, supplies and hospital procedures Transmission through air
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Routes of transmission Air-borne Contact spread (direct or indirect) Food-borne spread Blood-borne spread (injuries or transfusion) Self-infection and cross-infection
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Prevention The infection control policy Staff training and education Cleaning, disinfection and sterilization Aseptic techniques Prophylactic antibiotics
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Prevention Protective clothing Isolation of dangerous patients Hospital building and design Equipment Microbiology surveillance
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Control measures to reduce exogenous hospital acquired infection Patient water Staff carries Equipment Domestic environment Air Infectious patients Food Staff contact
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