Epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in Polish intensive care. A multicenter study based on active surveillance

Aim: The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence of health care-associated infections (HAIs) in patients treated in Polish intensive care units (ICUs). Methods: This retrospective analysis was based on the results of active targeted surveillance, according to the recommendation of the ECDC (...

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Main Authors: Michal Walaszek, Anna Rozanska, Malgorzata Bulanda, Jadwiga Wojkowska-Mach, Polish Society of Hospital Infections Team
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Palacký University Olomouc, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry 2018-09-01
Series:Biomedical Papers
Subjects:
Online Access:https://biomed.papers.upol.cz/artkey/bio-201803-0005_epidemiology_of_healthcare-associated_infections_in_polish_intensive_care_a_multicenter_study_based_on_active.php
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spelling doaj-6da263a5032f46fa86590b2884eeef7a2020-11-25T03:48:30ZengPalacký University Olomouc, Faculty of Medicine and DentistryBiomedical Papers1213-81181804-75212018-09-01162319019710.5507/bp.2018.006bio-201803-0005Epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in Polish intensive care. A multicenter study based on active surveillanceMichal Walaszek0Anna Rozanska1Malgorzata Bulanda2Jadwiga Wojkowska-Mach3Polish Society of Hospital Infections Team4Polish Society of Hospital Infections, Krakow, PolandDepartment of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, PolandDepartment of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, PolandDepartment of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, PolandPolish Society of Hospital Infections Team (listed at the end of the article)Aim: The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence of health care-associated infections (HAIs) in patients treated in Polish intensive care units (ICUs). Methods: This retrospective analysis was based on the results of active targeted surveillance, according to the recommendation of the ECDC (European Centre of Disease Control and Prevention, HAI-Net light protocol), conducted in 2013-2015 in seven ICUs for adults located in southern Poland (observational study). Results: The incidence of HAI was 22.6% and 28.7/1000 person-days (pds). The incidence of pneumonia (PN) was 8.0%, bloodstream infections (BSIs) 7.2% and urinary tract infections (UTIs) 3.7%. The incidence per 1000 pds was as follows: PN 10.2, BSIs 9.2 and UTIs 4.7. PN was the most common source of secondary bloodstream infection (45%); the second was UTIs (22%). Mortality (directly and indirectly) associated with HAI was 10.8% and was related to the presence of PN or primary BSIs. HAIs were usually (69.2%) caused by Gram-negative bacteria; Klebsiella spp. and nonfermenting Gram-negative rods demonstrated very high antibiotic resistance. Conclusion: Despite the lack of widely implemented active targeted surveillance programmes and top-down incentives, it is possible to carry out effective surveillance of HAIs in ICUs in Poland. The results of this study are comparable with the ECDC data, but the results are alarmingly high in two fields: epidemiology of PN and BSIs and very high antibiotic resistance in Gram-negative rods, which indicate the need for intense control in this area and for further studies to clarify the source of the observed discrepancy.https://biomed.papers.upol.cz/artkey/bio-201803-0005_epidemiology_of_healthcare-associated_infections_in_polish_intensive_care_a_multicenter_study_based_on_active.phpinfection controlhealthcare-associated infectionsintensive care unitsbloodstream infectionspneumoniaurinary tract infections
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michal Walaszek
Anna Rozanska
Malgorzata Bulanda
Jadwiga Wojkowska-Mach
Polish Society of Hospital Infections Team
spellingShingle Michal Walaszek
Anna Rozanska
Malgorzata Bulanda
Jadwiga Wojkowska-Mach
Polish Society of Hospital Infections Team
Epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in Polish intensive care. A multicenter study based on active surveillance
Biomedical Papers
infection control
healthcare-associated infections
intensive care units
bloodstream infections
pneumonia
urinary tract infections
author_facet Michal Walaszek
Anna Rozanska
Malgorzata Bulanda
Jadwiga Wojkowska-Mach
Polish Society of Hospital Infections Team
author_sort Michal Walaszek
title Epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in Polish intensive care. A multicenter study based on active surveillance
title_short Epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in Polish intensive care. A multicenter study based on active surveillance
title_full Epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in Polish intensive care. A multicenter study based on active surveillance
title_fullStr Epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in Polish intensive care. A multicenter study based on active surveillance
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in Polish intensive care. A multicenter study based on active surveillance
title_sort epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in polish intensive care. a multicenter study based on active surveillance
publisher Palacký University Olomouc, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry
series Biomedical Papers
issn 1213-8118
1804-7521
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Aim: The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence of health care-associated infections (HAIs) in patients treated in Polish intensive care units (ICUs). Methods: This retrospective analysis was based on the results of active targeted surveillance, according to the recommendation of the ECDC (European Centre of Disease Control and Prevention, HAI-Net light protocol), conducted in 2013-2015 in seven ICUs for adults located in southern Poland (observational study). Results: The incidence of HAI was 22.6% and 28.7/1000 person-days (pds). The incidence of pneumonia (PN) was 8.0%, bloodstream infections (BSIs) 7.2% and urinary tract infections (UTIs) 3.7%. The incidence per 1000 pds was as follows: PN 10.2, BSIs 9.2 and UTIs 4.7. PN was the most common source of secondary bloodstream infection (45%); the second was UTIs (22%). Mortality (directly and indirectly) associated with HAI was 10.8% and was related to the presence of PN or primary BSIs. HAIs were usually (69.2%) caused by Gram-negative bacteria; Klebsiella spp. and nonfermenting Gram-negative rods demonstrated very high antibiotic resistance. Conclusion: Despite the lack of widely implemented active targeted surveillance programmes and top-down incentives, it is possible to carry out effective surveillance of HAIs in ICUs in Poland. The results of this study are comparable with the ECDC data, but the results are alarmingly high in two fields: epidemiology of PN and BSIs and very high antibiotic resistance in Gram-negative rods, which indicate the need for intense control in this area and for further studies to clarify the source of the observed discrepancy.
topic infection control
healthcare-associated infections
intensive care units
bloodstream infections
pneumonia
urinary tract infections
url https://biomed.papers.upol.cz/artkey/bio-201803-0005_epidemiology_of_healthcare-associated_infections_in_polish_intensive_care_a_multicenter_study_based_on_active.php
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