More than 25% of skilled nursing facility residents have
multidrug-resistant bacteria lurking within them, including E. coli, a
new research review has found.
Researchers with the Columbia University School of Nursing
analyzed 12 studies and found the 2,720 nursing home residents whose
data was included in the review had drug-resistant bacteria prevalence
rates ranging from 11.2% to 59.1%. The study found a 27% average
colonization rate, with E. coli accounting for the largest proportion of
colonizations.
The review's results, published in the May issue of the American Journal of Infection Control,
also identified factors such as advanced age, gender, comorbidities,
increased interaction with healthcare workers and delayed initiation of
antibiotics to raise residents' colonization risk.
“This study underscores the importance of having strong
infection prevention programs in all nursing homes and long-term care
facilities,” said Linda Greene, RN, MPS, CIC, FAPIC, president of the
Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology.
“Understanding the dynamics and cause of MDR-GNB transmission is crucial
to identifying effective infection control strategies speciļ¬c to these
settings.”
The research teams encouraged providers to identify which
residents are most at risk for multidrug-resistant gram-negative
bacteria, and allow infection preventionists to tailor efforts
specifically for those residents.
Full Article & Source:
More than one-fourth of SNF residents colonized with drug-resistant bacteria, analysis shows
1 comment:
This makes me sick but it doesn't surprise me.
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