Abstract

A questionnaire survey of Belgian acute care hospitals was conducted to determine the methods used for detection of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), to estimate the prevalence of this organism during the period 1989-1991 and to describe the infection control measures used locally for limiting its spread. Questionnaires were returned by 144 acute care hospitals, with a coverage of 41 to 72% of hospitals by province. Methods used for detection of MRSA included disk diffusion (91%), microdilution panels (8%) and oxacillin agar screen (9%). Only 34% of laboratories performed disk diffusion testing under optimal conditions for detection of heterogenous resistance. Among 36 hospitals reporting complete susceptibility data of Staphylococcus aureus isolates tested during the study period (n = 24,153), a mean MRSA prevalence of 14% was found (range: 0-70%). The median prevalence increased from 9.5% in 1989 to 13.7% in 1991 and showed a significant linear increase during this period in 30% of these hospitals (p < 0.01). Precautions used for controlling spread of MRSA included hand decontamination using either soap and water or antimicrobial preparations (68% of hospitals), room decontamination (62%), patient isolation (55%) and various barrier precautions (24-49%). Carrier screening was performed in 37% of hospitals, but antibiotic decolonization was attempted in only 24%. This survey identified areas for improvement in MRSA detection methods and underscored the need for multicentric surveillance of MRSA prevalence and a reappraisal of MRSA control strategies in Belgian hospitals.

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