一家三级医院的医护人员相关感染:病人转诊做法的意义。

The East African health research journal Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-28 DOI:10.24248/eahrj.v8i1.756
Agapiti H Chuwa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:非医院感染又称医疗相关感染(HCAIs),是指患者在入院 48 小时内接受医疗服务时感染的疾病。在高收入国家,平均有 7% 的住院病人会感染非医院感染。但在中低收入国家,感染率可高达 30%。这是由于用于感染控制的资源和用品有限、培训不足以及缺乏对感染预防和控制法规的遵守:方法:对坦桑尼亚一家三级医疗机构的住院病人进行了一项横断面医院研究。研究采用半结构式问卷调查法,收集了不同病房 134 名患者的信息。为了确定自变量(即慢性病、侵入性程序、抗生素的使用和转诊情况)与因变量(即新症状)之间的关联及其显著性水平,进行了相关和多元回归分析。显著性水平设定为 P≤ .05:共有 134 名患者参与了研究。其中,61%(n=82)的患者为男性,43%(n=57)的患者是从其他机构转来的。15%(n=21)的受访患者报告了新症状。转诊情况和侵入性手术与新症状的出现呈正相关。多变量分析表明,"转诊情况 "是与医疗相关感染呈正相关的独立重要因素(P=041):结果表明,医疗相关感染的发病率为 15.7%,这对于一家三级医疗机构来说是不可接受的高发病率。转诊情况与 HCAI 有明显的独立关联。改善患者转诊模式和医院感染控制可大大降低医疗相关感染的风险。
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Healthcare-Associated Infections in a Tertiary Care Hospital: Significance of Patient Referral Practices.

Introduction: Nosocomial infections, also known as healthcare-associated infections (HCAIs), are infections that a patient acquires while receiving healthcare services within 48 hours of admission to hospital. In high income countries, an average of 7% of hospitalised patients acquire a nosocomial infection. In low and middle income countries, however, prevalence rates can be as high as 30%. This is due to limited resources and supplies for infection control, inadequate training and lack of compliance with infection prevention and control regulations.

Methods: A cross-sectional, hospital based study was conducted among patients admitted to a tertiary care facility in Tanzania. A semi-structured questionnaire was used to collect information from 134 patients in different wards. Correlation and multivariate regression analyses were performed to determine the association between the independent variables, i.e. chronic illness, invasive procedures, use of antibiotics and referral status, and the dependent variable, i.e. new symptom, and their level of significance. The significance level was set at P≤ .05.

Results: A total of 134 patients participated in the study. Of the total number, 61% (n=82) of the patients were male and 43% (n=57) were referrals from other institutions. Fifteen percent (n=21) of the surveyed patients reported a new symptom. There was a positive correlation between referral status and invasive procedure with the occurrence of a new symptom. Multivariate analysis identified 'referral status' as an independent significant factor positively associated with healthcare-associated infetions (P=.041).

Conclusions: The results indicate a prevalence of 15.7% of healthcare-associated infections, which is unacceptably high for a tertiary care facility. Referral status was independently and significantly associated with HCAI. Improving patient referral patterns and hospital infection control can significantly reduce the risk of healthcare-associated infections.

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