Microbial Colonization in a New Intensive Care Burn Unit. A Prospective Cohort Study

Renovation of an existing intensive care burn facility required closure for ten months. An interim eight-bed open intensive care ward (B) was established in a burn convalescence ward. The renovated unit (A) contained nine single-bed intensive care rooms and seven intermediate-level care beds in four...

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Hauptverfasser: McManus, A T, McManus, W F, Mason, A D , Jr, Aitcheson, A R, Pruitt, B A , Jr
Format: Report
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Renovation of an existing intensive care burn facility required closure for ten months. An interim eight-bed open intensive care ward (B) was established in a burn convalescence ward. The renovated unit (A) contained nine single-bed intensive care rooms and seven intermediate-level care beds in four rooms. Patients admitted to unit A were treated as a cohort. The first 25 admissions to unit A and the last 25 admissions to ward B meeting the inclusion criteria were compared. Microbial colonization was monitored by a fixed protocol of admission and multiple weekly sputum, wound, stool, and urine cultures. During intensive care, both cohorts exhibited the same incidence of gram- negative wound, sputum, and urine colonization. Occurrence of antibiotic- resistant organisms was the same. No evidence of bacterial cross-contamination was observed between A and B. A continuation of Providencia stuartil and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (type 15) endemics occurred in B. The collected data demonstrate that the A cohort was colonized with new, similar but distinct gram- negative organisms and indicate that cohort separation may be a practical way of eliminating endemic resistant gram-negative organisms from burn units. (Reprints). Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Surgical Infection Society (4th) Held at Montreal, Canada on 1 May 84