Abstract

Hospital-acquired infections (HAI) are often seen as preventable incidents that result from unsafe practices or poor hospital hygiene. This however ignores the fact that transmissibility is not only a property of the causative organisms but also of the hosts who can translocate bacteria when moving between hospitals. In an epidemiological sense, hospitals become connected through the patients they share. We here postulate that the degree of hospital connectedness crucially influences the rates of infections caused by hospital-acquired bacteria. To test this hypothesis, we mapped the movement of patients based on the UK-NHS Hospital Episode Statistics and observed that the proportion of patients admitted to a hospital after a recent episode in another hospital correlates with the hospital-specific incidence rate of MRSA bacteraemia as recorded by mandatory reporting. We observed a positive correlation between hospital connectedness and MRSA bacteraemia incidence rate that is significant for all financial years since 2001 except for 2008–09. All years combined, this correlation is positive and significantly different from zero (partial correlation coefficient r = 0.33 (0.28 to 0.38)). When comparing the referral pattern for English hospitals with referral patterns observed in the Netherlands, we predict that English hospitals more likely see a swifter and more sustained spread of HAIs. Our results indicate that hospitals cannot be viewed as individual units but rather should be viewed as connected elements of larger modular networks. Our findings stress the importance of cooperative effects that will have a bearing on the planning of health care systems, patient management and hospital infection control.

Highlights

  • The spread of hospital-acquired infections (HAI) has been mainly studied at the level of single hospitals [1,2], as most investigators have focussed on the immediate causes of nosocomial transmission [3,4]

  • The results show that patient referrals between hospitals correlate with hospital-specific methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) rates as recorded by the English mandatory surveillance of MRSA bacteraemia

  • The incidence rate and connectedness tend to increase with hospital referral level and size

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Summary

Introduction

The spread of hospital-acquired infections (HAI) has been mainly studied at the level of single hospitals [1,2], as most investigators have focussed on the immediate causes of nosocomial transmission [3,4]. These causes consist of a mix of risk factors which are pathogen–, patient– and health care-related [5]. HAIs are mainly caused by opportunistic bacteria often belonging to successful clonal lineages [6,7] with frequent resistance to antibiotics, which enhances their dispersal ability in settings where vulnerable patients receive multiple antibiotic therapies [8]. By tracking all admissions and discharges in a country over time, the structure of the national hospital referral network can be revealed

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