Abstract

BackgroundThe role of the environment in hospital acquired infections is well established. We examined the impact on the infection rate for hospital onset Clostridioides difficile (HO-CDI) of an environmental hygiene intervention in 48 hospitals over a 5 year period using a pulsed xenon ultraviolet (PX-UV) disinfection system.MethodsUtilization data was collected directly from the automated PX-UV system and uploaded in real time to a database. HO-CDI data was provided by each facility. Data was analyzed at the unit level to determine compliance to disinfection protocols. Final data set included 5 years of data aggregated to the facility level, resulting in a dataset of 48 hospitals and a date range of January 2015–December 2019. Negative binomial regression was used with an offset on patient days to convert infection count data and assess HO-CDI rates vs. intervention compliance rate, total successful disinfection cycles, and total rooms disinfected. The K-Nearest Neighbor (KNN) machine learning algorithm was used to compare intervention compliance and total intervention cycles to presence of infection.ResultsAll regression models depict a statistically significant inverse association between the intervention and HO-CDI rates. The KNN model predicts the presence of infection (or whether an infection will be present or not) with greater than 98% accuracy when considering both intervention compliance and total intervention cycles.ConclusionsThe findings of this study indicate a strong inverse relationship between the utilization of the pulsed xenon intervention and HO-CDI rates.

Highlights

  • The role of the environment in transmission of hospital acquired infections (HAI) is well established [1, 2]

  • Inclusion/Exclusion criteria All healthcare facilities located in the United States with a deployed pulsed xenon ultraviolet (PX-UV) disinfection system at the time of analysis were eligible for inclusion in the data set

  • The National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) definition for hospital onset Clostridioides difficile (HO-CDI) was changed at the beginning of 2015

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Summary

Introduction

The role of the environment in transmission of hospital acquired infections (HAI) is well established [1, 2]. Manual cleaning has been shown to inadequately remove pathogens from the environment [3], and these pathogens may persist on surfaces for months [4] This inadequacy of manual cleaning can be directly linked to an increased risk of infection acquisition for subsequent patients, with a reported increased risk of 135% for patients in previous Clostridioides difficile isolation rooms [5,6,7]. In rooms of patients with active C. difficile infection, gloved hands become just as contaminated when contacting the patient’s environment as Simmons et al BMC Infect Dis (2021) 21:1084 when contacting the patient’s skin [10]. We examined the impact on the infection rate for hospital onset Clostridioides difficile (HO-CDI) of an environmental hygiene intervention in 48 hospitals over a 5 year period using a pulsed xenon ultraviolet (PX-UV) disinfection system

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