A comparison of infections in different ICUs within the same hospital
Infections identified between 1981 and 1983 in a hospitalʼs medical/surgical, pediatric, neonatal, coronary care, and cardiac surgery ICUs were compared. Among 14,360 admissions, 1840 infections occurred in 1360 patients. Total infection rates ranged from 1.0% (cardiac surgery ICU) to 23.5% (medical...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Critical care medicine 1985-06, Vol.13 (6), p.472-476 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Infections identified between 1981 and 1983 in a hospitalʼs medical/surgical, pediatric, neonatal, coronary care, and cardiac surgery ICUs were compared. Among 14,360 admissions, 1840 infections occurred in 1360 patients. Total infection rates ranged from 1.0% (cardiac surgery ICU) to 23.5% (medical/surgical ICU). Rates of ICU-acquired infection ranged from 0.8% (cardiac surgery ICU) to 11.2% (medical/surgical ICU), indicating that only about half of infections in the latter unit were acquired from within.Primary bacteremias comprised 14.5% of neonatal ICU infections, a rate 500% higher than in other ICUs. Meningitis and genitourinary infections were more common in pediatric and coronary care ICUs. Candida and Pseudomonas species and Klebsiella-Enterobacter-Ser-ratia were most common in the medical/surgical ICU. Survival rate of infected patients was over 87% in pediatric and neonatal ICUs, compared with only 55.4% in the medical/surgical ICU.These differences in types and rates of infection have an important bearing on infection-control activities in the ICU, and also provide a yardstick against which similar institutions can gauge their ICU infection status. |
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ISSN: | 0090-3493 1530-0293 |
DOI: | 10.1097/00003246-198506000-00006 |