학술논문

Hospital-level risk factors for healthcare-associated infections: insight from the Italian PPS Study...14th European Public Health Conference (Virtual), Public health futures in a changing world, November 10-12, 2021.
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
European Journal of Public Health (EUR J PUBLIC HEALTH), 2021 Supplement; 31: iii320-iii320. (1p)
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1101-1262
Abstract
Background: In 2016-2017, a Point Prevalence Survey (PPS) was conducted by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) in 29 European countries to investigate healthcareassociated infections (HAIs) and antimicrobial use. The aim of this study was to identify significant determinants of HAIs at a hospital level according to Italian data. Methods: Among variables considered by the ECDC Protocol for the PPS, those with most plausible relationship with HAI occurrence according to the literature were a priori selected. Hence, conceptual causal models were built for each reference variable, by adjusting for an established set of confounders (geographical region, hospital type and number of beds), and also considering the possible interaction of the number of blood cultures per 100 patient-days (a proxy of how thoroughly HAIs are searched). Direct effects were estimated in the form of risk ratios through multivariable log-binomial regression models. Results: Data were available for 135 Italian hospitals participating in the survey. Factors with significant impact on HAIs resulted to be: percentage of single rooms (RR = 0.91 for every 5% increase, p = 0.013), presence of a plan for infection prevention and control (IPC, RR = 0.51, p = 0.007), routine production of an IPC report (RR = 0.50, p = 0.001), adoption of measures for HAI prevention (RR = 0.21, p = 0.002) and antimicrobial stewardship (RR = 0.50, p = 0.015). The interaction of the number of blood cultures was significant for the effect of IPC report (p = 0.038), number of measures for HAI prevention (p = 0.037) and antimicrobial stewardship (p = 0.02). Conclusions: The results confirm the importance of HAI prevention and antimicrobial stewardship as means of lowering the occurrence of HAIs. Therefore, investigating, testing and correctly reporting the onset and evolution of HAIs is paramount to ensure better understanding of the phenomenon and to provide useful insights to create a safer background for clinical practice.