Rural hospital bed management practices during influenza season

被引:1
|
作者
Ma, Colleen [1 ]
Pettit, Chen [1 ]
Giles, Michelle [2 ]
Ohr, Se Ok [2 ]
Bolte, Michelle [3 ]
机构
[1] Tamworth Rural Referral Hosp, Dean St, Tamworth, NSW 2340, Australia
[2] Hunter New England Nursing & Midwifery Res Ctr, James Fletcher Campus,72 Watt St, Newcastle, NSW 2300, Australia
[3] Tamworth Rural Referral Hosp, Infect Prevent Serv, Dean St, Tamworth, NSW 2340, Australia
来源
RURAL AND REMOTE HEALTH | 2022年 / 22卷 / 01期
关键词
Australia; cross-infection; hospitals; infection control; influenza; ACQUIRED INFLUENZA; INFECTIONS; TRANSFERS;
D O I
10.22605/RRH7015
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Introduction: Rural health services face greater challenges in managing infectious patients due to lack of specialty beds and longer lengths of stay. The pressures of seasonal influxes of influenza patients with a heavy burden of chronic disease and an ageing population result in an increased demand for hospital beds. During these peak periods it is common for rural hospitals to experience bed block. The result is that patients may be placed into any available bed or ward at the time, increasing the need for transfer and the risk of spreading hospital-acquired respiratory illnesses to other patients and staff across the hospital. This further exacerbates bed block, with patients then requiring more specialised treatment and longer lengths of stay. This places additional strain on already existing workforce shortages and limited resources that must accommodate higher-than-normal patient loads. The objective of this study was to examine rural hospital bed management practices with a focus on the transfer of patients who are actively diagnosed with influenza (either on admission or during their stay in hospital) and to investigate the association of increased bed movement with the rate of nosocomial transmission and staff workload. Methods: The rates of patients admitted to a rural hospital in New South Wales, Australia, during the yearly peak influenza season (July to September) during 2016-2019 with either community-acquired or hospital-acquired influenza were examined using an infection control surveillance program.
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页数:5
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