Health Care–Associated Infections in Children

Health-care associated infections (HAI) result in significant morbidity, prolong hospitalization, increase health care costs, and contribute to patient deaths. Efforts to reduce the rates of HAI in children are often hampered by the lack of pediatric-specific research, lack of national pediatric-spe...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2011-04, Vol.305 (14), p.1480-1481
Hauptverfasser: Foster, Charles B, Sabella, Camille
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container_title JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association
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creator Foster, Charles B
Sabella, Camille
description Health-care associated infections (HAI) result in significant morbidity, prolong hospitalization, increase health care costs, and contribute to patient deaths. Efforts to reduce the rates of HAI in children are often hampered by the lack of pediatric-specific research, lack of national pediatric-specific quality measures to guide prevention of surgical site infections, and the implementation of infection prevention practices validated only in adult populations. Foster and Sabella discuss HAI in children and the national quality improvement program needed to reduce HAI.
doi_str_mv 10.1001/jama.2011.449
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subjects Bacteremia - drug therapy
Bacteremia - etiology
Bacteremia - prevention & control
Biomedical Research - trends
Catheter-Related Infections - drug therapy
Catheter-Related Infections - etiology
Catheter-Related Infections - prevention & control
Child
Child, Preschool
Childrens health
Cross Infection - drug therapy
Cross Infection - etiology
Cross Infection - prevention & control
Disease Susceptibility
Health Policy
Humans
Iatrogenic Disease - prevention & control
Infant
Infections
Intensive Care Units, Pediatric
Pediatrics
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Surgical outcomes
Surgical Wound Infection - drug therapy
Surgical Wound Infection - etiology
Surgical Wound Infection - prevention & control
United States
title Health Care–Associated Infections in Children
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