Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the risk of hospital-acquired diarrhoea during an epidemic period through a prospective multicentre observational study. A systemic investigation of the hospital-acquired diarrhoea (occurring at least 48 h after hospital admission) was conducted through a standardised questionnaire from January to March 1999 in patients of 5 years old or less hospitalised in 28 wards (620 beds) belonging to 20 hospitals located in the south-east part of France. Overall, 241 cases of hospital-acquired diarrhoea were collected, corresponding to a prevalence of 3.3% (3.6% after exclusion of patients admitted for diarrhoea) and a density of incidence of 0.81 per 100 days of hospitalisation. The mean stay duration of hospital-infected patients was greater than 10 days, versus 3.9 days for the other children ( P < 0.001). A readmission was required in 27% of the infected children. Rotavirus was involved in 97.8% of microbiologically documented cases (88%). In 50% of the cases, the hospital-acquired diarrhoea was seen in patients with bronchiolitis. Contact isolation measures were prescribed in 88.4% of the cases. These results stress that hospital-acquired diarrhoea represent an important medical and economic load for paediatric units and could be used as reference data to evaluate the impact of preventive measures, especially to reduce readmission and mean stay duration.

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