Abstract

Over the last years, a number of stochastic models have been proposed for analysing the spread of nosocomial infections in hospital settings. These models often account for a number of factors governing the spread dynamics: spontaneous patient colonization, patient–staff contamination/colonization, environmental contamination, patient cohorting or healthcare workers (HCWs) hand-washing compliance levels. For each model, tailor-designed methods are implemented in order to analyse the dynamics of the nosocomial outbreak, usually by means of studying quantities of interest such as the reproduction number of each agent in the hospital ward, which is usually computed by means of stochastic simulations or deterministic approximations. In this work, we propose a highly versatile stochastic modelling framework that can account for all these factors simultaneously, and which allows one to exactly analyse the reproduction number of each agent at the hospital ward during a nosocomial outbreak. By means of five representative case studies, we show how this unified modelling framework comprehends, as particular cases, many of the existing models in the literature. We implement various numerical studies via which we (i) highlight the importance of maintaining high hand-hygiene compliance levels by HCWs, (ii) support infection control strategies including to improve environmental cleaning during an outbreak and (iii) show the potential of some HCWs to act as super-spreaders during nosocomial outbreaks.

Highlights

  • The risk of acquiring nosocomial infections is a recognized problem in healthcare facilities worldwide [1]

  • We propose a versatile stochastic modelling framework that can simultaneously account for all the factors listed above, and which allows in §2 for the exact and analytical study of the reproduction number of each agent at the hospital ward during the nosocomial outbreak

  • We propose the unified stochastic modelling framework for the spread of nosocomial infections, where agents represented in the model can be of different type

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Summary

Introduction

The risk of acquiring nosocomial infections is a recognized problem in healthcare facilities worldwide [1]. When constructing and studying these stochastic models, efforts have been focused, and tailor-designed analytical and numerical methods have been implemented, in order to analyse the dynamics of the nosocomial outbreak when accounting for spontaneous colonization of patients, patient-to-staff and staff-to-patient contamination/colonization, environmental contamination, patient cohorting, room configuration of the hospital ward, staff hand-washing compliance levels, the presence of different types of HCWs or specific staff– patient contact network structures This analysis is usually carried 2 out by means of studying summary statistics directly related to the nosocomial outbreak, such as the reproduction number of each particular agent (e.g. of a colonized patient or a contaminated healthcare worker) in the hospital ward.

A unified stochastic modelling framework
The model
Case studies
Modelling spread among patients and healthcare 5 workers
Considering different healthcare worker types
Assessing environmental contamination
Incorporating space through room configuration of the ward
Discussion
10 AP22 8
Full Text
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