Abstract

A previous study at the University of Alberta Hospital/Stollery Children's Hospital in Edmonton, Alberta, revealed an increase in hospital-acquired bloodstream infection (BSI) rates associated with an increase in patient acuity during a period of public health care delivery restructuring between 1993 and 1996. The present study assessed trends in BSIs since the end of the restructuring. Prospective surveillance for BSIs was performed using Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (USA) criteria for infection. BSI cases between January 1, 1999, and December 31, 2005, were reviewed. Available measures of patient volumes, acuity and BSI risk factors between 1999 and 2005 were also reviewed from hospital records. The University of Alberta Hospital/Stollery Children's Hospital (617 adult and 139 pediatric beds, respectively). All pediatric and adult patients admitted during the above-specified period with one or more episodes of BSIs. There was a significant overall decline in the BSI number and rate over the study period between 1999 and 2005. The downward trend was widespread, involving both adult and pediatric populations, as well as primary and secondary BSIs. During this period, the number of hospital-wide and intensive care unit admissions, intensive care unit central venous catheter-days, total parenteral nutrition days and number of solid-organ transplants were either unchanged or increased. Gram-positive bacterial causes of BSIs showed significant downward trends, but Gram-negative bacterial and fungal etiologies were unchanged. These data imply that, over time, hospitals can gradually adjust to changing patient care circumstances and, in this example, control infectious complications of health care delivery.

Highlights

  • M-C Lee, L Saxinger, S Forgie, G Taylor

  • ObJECTIvE: A previous study at the University of Alberta Hospital/ Stollery Children’s Hospital in Edmonton, Alberta, revealed an increase in hospital-acquired bloodstream infection (BSI) rates associated with an increase in patient acuity during a period of public health care delivery restructuring between 1993 and 1996

  • In the present follow-up study, we sought to analyze the trends of both hospital activity and patient acuity as well as BSIs during the subsequent seven years following the previous report [4]

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Summary

OriginAl ArTicle

Mao-Cheng Lee MD FRCPC1, Lynora Saxinger MD FRCPC1, Sarah E Forgie MD FRCPC2, Geoffrey Taylor MD FRCPC1. ObJECTIvE: A previous study at the University of Alberta Hospital/ Stollery Children’s Hospital in Edmonton, Alberta, revealed an increase in hospital-acquired bloodstream infection (BSI) rates associated with an increase in patient acuity during a period of public health care delivery restructuring between 1993 and 1996. The 1993 to 1996 restructuring era of public health care delivery in the province of Alberta involved a dramatic budgetary funding cut for existing health care services, and a significant shifting of certain types of patients from acute tertiary hospitals to community-based hospital settings This resulted in a significant reduction in the operational budget of the University of Alberta Hospital and the Stollery Children’s Hospital (located within the University of Alberta Hospital) in Edmonton, Alberta, and a marked concomitant increase in patient acuity and in primary and secondary BSI rates [4]. In the present follow-up study, we sought to analyze the trends of both hospital activity and patient acuity as well as BSIs during the subsequent seven years following the previous report [4]

PATIENTS AND METHODS
Total number of ICU CVC lines infected
Superficial skin infection source
Findings
Pseudomonas species

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