Impact of Institution Size, Staffing Patterns, and Infection Control Practices on Communicable Disease Outbreaks in New York State Nursing Homes

Institutional risk factors associated with the occurrence of nosocomial respiratory or gastrointestinal disease outbreaks in 1992 were examined in a case-cohort study of New York State nursing homes conducted in 1993. Facility size, staffing patterns, and employee sick leave policies were the princi...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of epidemiology 1996-05, Vol.143 (10), p.1042-1049
Hauptverfasser: Li, Jiehui, Birkhead, Guthrie S., Strogatz, David S., Coles, F. Bruce
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container_end_page 1049
container_issue 10
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container_title American journal of epidemiology
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creator Li, Jiehui
Birkhead, Guthrie S.
Strogatz, David S.
Coles, F. Bruce
description Institutional risk factors associated with the occurrence of nosocomial respiratory or gastrointestinal disease outbreaks in 1992 were examined in a case-cohort study of New York State nursing homes conducted in 1993. Facility size, staffing patterns, and employee sick leave policies were the principal effects found in an unconditional logistic regression model. The risk of having respiratory or gastrointestinal disease outbreaks was greater in larger nursing homes (adjusted risk ratio (RR) = 1.71 for each 100-bed increase in size, 95% confidence interval (Cl) 1.20–2.42), for nursing homes with a single nursing unit (adjusted RR = 3.93, 95% Cl 0.98–15.71), or those with multiple nursing units with shared staff (adjusted RR = 2.51, 95% Cl 1.07–5.89). The risk was less for nursing homes with paid employee sick leave policies (adjusted RR = 0.38, 95% Cl 0.15–0.99). Other potential risk factors examined in this study, such as the ratio of the beds per unit, type of sponsorship, daily review of laboratory test results, and the proportion of private beds and patient-to-staff ratio, were not significantly associated with the risk of disease outbreaks. The results of this study have direct implications for control of nosocomial disease outbreaks in nursing homes.
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Biological and medical sciences
Case-Control Studies
Communicable Disease Control - methods
Cross Infection - epidemiology
cross infections
disease outbreaks
Disease Outbreaks - prevention & control
General aspects
Health Facility Size
Homes for the Aged - organization & administration
Humans
infection control
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Multivariate Analysis
New York - epidemiology
nursing homes
Nursing Homes - organization & administration
Personnel Staffing and Scheduling
Risk Factors
Tumors
title Impact of Institution Size, Staffing Patterns, and Infection Control Practices on Communicable Disease Outbreaks in New York State Nursing Homes
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