Abstract

With high numbers of refugees arriving in Europe uncertainty exists as to whether multidrug-resistant organisms are imported into the healthcare system. In our study, we identified 383 refugee-inpatients admitted to the University Hospital Münster, Germany between September 2015 and September 2016. For this patient cohort screening for Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria (MDR-GNB) and Vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) was recommended in our institution. Until May 2016 pre-emptive isolation was applied to all refugee-inpatients until the exclusion of these multidrug-resistant organisms. MRSA were found in 34 refugee-patients (9.8%), MDR-GNB in 25 refugee-patients (12.9%) and VRE in none of the refugee patients. We did not find any strains carrying carbapenemases. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) data demonstrated that the respective isolates were genetically heterogeneous and revealed no transmission of refugee-patient isolates to other patients. We therefore omitted pre-emptive isolation as an infection control measure for this group of patients. Furthermore, molecular typing did not show evidence for nosocomial transmission from refugee-patients to other patients. Standard hygiene measures successfully prevented the transmission of refugee-patient isolates to other patients and as a result introduction into the healthcare system. This underlines that any multidrug-resistant organisms present within this cohort are not of any extraordinary concern for health systems.

Highlights

  • Europe and Germany in particular experienced a dramatic rise of refugees seeking asylum during the past years [1]

  • 606 refugees were treated as inpatients in our institution resulting in 383 cases that met the inclusion criteria to be recommended for screening for multidrug-resistant organisms (MDRO)

  • The excluded 224 cases were in majority readmitted patients in addition to newborn babies born in our institution and psychiatric or psychosomatic patients and not screened for MDRO according to infection control standards in our institution

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Summary

Introduction

Europe and Germany in particular experienced a dramatic rise of refugees seeking asylum during the past years [1]. A total of 441.899 people filed an asylum request in 2015. The Main countries of origin were Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan followed by Albania, Kosovo and Serbia. It is assumed that 800.000 to 1 million refugees were registered in Germany in 2015 [1].

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