A Study on Hospital Acquired Infections among Patients in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Darjeeling District, West Bengal

Introduction Hospital Acquired Infections (HAI), also called ‘Nosocomial Infections’ are identified at least 48-72 hours following admission to health institution. In many hospitals, HAI appears to be a hidden, cross-cutting problem. Thus a continuous surveillance is imperative for determining the...

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Main Authors: Maumita De, Diptanshu Mukherjee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Association of Otolaryngologists of India, West Bengal 2018-12-01
Series:Bengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bjohns.in/journal/index.php/bjohns/article/view/436
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spelling doaj-5c6e37ccce9242eca450b963573b4c4f2020-11-25T01:54:35ZengThe Association of Otolaryngologists of India, West BengalBengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery2395-24072395-24072018-12-01263197206179A Study on Hospital Acquired Infections among Patients in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Darjeeling District, West BengalMaumita De0Diptanshu Mukherjee1Malda Medical college, MaldaMedical College, KolkataIntroduction Hospital Acquired Infections (HAI), also called ‘Nosocomial Infections’ are identified at least 48-72 hours following admission to health institution. In many hospitals, HAI appears to be a hidden, cross-cutting problem. Thus a continuous surveillance is imperative for determining the extent of the problem and its effective prevention and control. Present study determines the incidence and different types of hospital acquired infections and the bacterial pathogens responsible for those. Materials and Methods An observational longitudinal study was undertaken during January to June 2014, among 107 patients admitted in ENT wards of North Bengal Medical College and Hospital (NBMCH), selected by consecutive inclusion technique. Information was taken using a predesigned, pretested semi-structured schedule. The collected data were analyzed as frequencies, percentages and means ± standard deviations. Results The present study found incidence rate of hospital acquired infections as 19.6% and incidence density as 26.35 per 1000 patient days. Surgical site infection was commonest type (57.2%) followed by urinary tract infection (23.8%) and blood stream infection (19.0%) respectively. 15.4% of blood cultures, 100.0% of surgical wound swab cultures and 21.7% of urine cultures were positive and gram negative bacteria were most frequently occurring organisms. Most commonly found bacteria were Pseudomonas and Klebsiella. Discussion Background characteristics of the study population; incidence rate, the different types of hospital acquired infections among those admitted patients and the bacterial pathogens responsible for those infections have been discussed along with review of literature. Conclusion Even if in a tertiary health care facility, hospital acquired infection rate could not be brought down into <10%. So implementation of stringent guidelines on prevention of HAI and continuous surveillance and monitoring system can help to diminish this problem in future.https://bjohns.in/journal/index.php/bjohns/article/view/436Hospital Acquired InfectionsNosocomial InfectionsSurgical Wound InfectionUrinary Tract InfectionsBacterial Infections
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maumita De
Diptanshu Mukherjee
spellingShingle Maumita De
Diptanshu Mukherjee
A Study on Hospital Acquired Infections among Patients in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Darjeeling District, West Bengal
Bengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery
Hospital Acquired Infections
Nosocomial Infections
Surgical Wound Infection
Urinary Tract Infections
Bacterial Infections
author_facet Maumita De
Diptanshu Mukherjee
author_sort Maumita De
title A Study on Hospital Acquired Infections among Patients in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Darjeeling District, West Bengal
title_short A Study on Hospital Acquired Infections among Patients in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Darjeeling District, West Bengal
title_full A Study on Hospital Acquired Infections among Patients in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Darjeeling District, West Bengal
title_fullStr A Study on Hospital Acquired Infections among Patients in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Darjeeling District, West Bengal
title_full_unstemmed A Study on Hospital Acquired Infections among Patients in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Darjeeling District, West Bengal
title_sort study on hospital acquired infections among patients in a tertiary care hospital of darjeeling district, west bengal
publisher The Association of Otolaryngologists of India, West Bengal
series Bengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery
issn 2395-2407
2395-2407
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Introduction Hospital Acquired Infections (HAI), also called ‘Nosocomial Infections’ are identified at least 48-72 hours following admission to health institution. In many hospitals, HAI appears to be a hidden, cross-cutting problem. Thus a continuous surveillance is imperative for determining the extent of the problem and its effective prevention and control. Present study determines the incidence and different types of hospital acquired infections and the bacterial pathogens responsible for those. Materials and Methods An observational longitudinal study was undertaken during January to June 2014, among 107 patients admitted in ENT wards of North Bengal Medical College and Hospital (NBMCH), selected by consecutive inclusion technique. Information was taken using a predesigned, pretested semi-structured schedule. The collected data were analyzed as frequencies, percentages and means ± standard deviations. Results The present study found incidence rate of hospital acquired infections as 19.6% and incidence density as 26.35 per 1000 patient days. Surgical site infection was commonest type (57.2%) followed by urinary tract infection (23.8%) and blood stream infection (19.0%) respectively. 15.4% of blood cultures, 100.0% of surgical wound swab cultures and 21.7% of urine cultures were positive and gram negative bacteria were most frequently occurring organisms. Most commonly found bacteria were Pseudomonas and Klebsiella. Discussion Background characteristics of the study population; incidence rate, the different types of hospital acquired infections among those admitted patients and the bacterial pathogens responsible for those infections have been discussed along with review of literature. Conclusion Even if in a tertiary health care facility, hospital acquired infection rate could not be brought down into <10%. So implementation of stringent guidelines on prevention of HAI and continuous surveillance and monitoring system can help to diminish this problem in future.
topic Hospital Acquired Infections
Nosocomial Infections
Surgical Wound Infection
Urinary Tract Infections
Bacterial Infections
url https://bjohns.in/journal/index.php/bjohns/article/view/436
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