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1.
Antibiotics (Basel) ; 13(5)2024 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38786155

ABSTRACT

Carbapenemase-producing enterobacterales (CPE) poses an increasing threat in hospitals worldwide. Recently, the prevalence of different carbapenemases conferring carbapenem resistance in enterobacterales changed in our country, including an increase in New Delhi Metallo-beta-lactamase (NDM)-CPE. We conducted a comparative historical study of adult patients colonized with Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC)-CPE (July 2016 to June 2018, a historical cohort) vs. NDM-CPE (July 2016 to January 2023). We identified patients retrospectively through the microbiology laboratory and reviewed their files, extracting demographics, underlying diseases, Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) scores, treatments, and outcomes. This study included 228 consecutive patients from whom a CPE rectal swab screening was obtained: 136 NDM-CPE positive and 92 KPC-CPE positive. NDM-CPE-colonized patients had a shorter hospitalization length and a significantly lower 30-day post-discharge mortality rate (p = 0.002) than KPC-CPE-colonized patients. Based on multivariate regression, independent risk factors predicting CPE-NDM colonization included admission from home and CCI < 4 (p < 0.001, p = 0.037, respectively). The increase in NDM-CPE prevalence necessitates a modified CPE screening strategy upon hospital admission tailored to the changing local CPE epidemiology. In our region, the screening of younger patients residing at home with fewer comorbidities should be considered, regardless of a prior community healthcare contact or hospital admission.

2.
Arch Public Health ; 80(1): 141, 2022 May 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35585634

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hand hygiene compliance by health care workers (HCWs) is pivotal in controlling and preventing health care associated infections. The aim of this interventional study is to assess the long-term impact of personal verbal feedback on hand hygiene compliance of HCWs in an intensive care unit (ICU) immediately after overt observation by an infection control nurse. METHODS: An infection control nurse overtly observed HCWs' hand hygiene compliance and immediately gave personal verbal feedback with emphasis on aseptic technique. Overt non-interventional sessions were also performed. We measured compliance rates using covert continuous closed-circuit television (CCTV) monitoring. We compared these rates to previously-published hand hygiene compliance data. RESULTS: Overall compliance rates in the first (41.5%) and third phases (42%) of the study, before and after the intervention were similar. The two moments that were lowest in the first phase, "before aseptic contact" and "after exposure to body fluids", showed significant improvement, but two moments showed a significant decline in compliance: "before patient contact" and "after contact with patient surrounding". The compliance rates during the intervention phase were 64.8% and 63.8% during the sessions with and without immediate verbal personal feedback, respectively. CONCLUSION: The overall hand hygiene compliance rate of HCWs did not show an improvement after immediate verbal personal feedback. Covert CCTV observational sessions yielded much lower hand hygiene compliance rates then overt interventional and non-interventional observations. We suggest that a single intervention of personal feedback immediately after an observational session is an ineffective strategy to change habitual practices.

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