Hospital-acquired infections in a tertiary hospital in Iran before and during the COVID-19 pandemic

被引:0
作者
Abdolreza Mohammadi
Fatemeh Khatami
Zohreh Azimbeik
Alireza Khajavi
Mehdi Aloosh
Seyed Mohammad Kazem Aghamir
机构
[1] Tehran University of Medical Sciences,Urology Research Center
[2] Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences,Student Research Committee, School of Allied Medical Sciences
[3] McMaster University,Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine
来源
Wiener Medizinische Wochenschrift | 2022年 / 172卷
关键词
Nosocomial infections; Healthcare-associated infections infection prevention; Surgical site infections; Urinary tract infections; Bloodstream infection;
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学科分类号
摘要
Infection prevention protocols are the accepted standard to control nosocomial infections. These protective measures intensified after the coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic to reduce the risk of viral transmission. It is the rationale that this practice reduces nosocomial infections. We evaluated the impact of these protective measures on nosocomial infections in our center with more than 20,000 records of annual patient admission. In a retrospective study, we evaluated the incidence of nosocomial infections in Sina hospital for 9 months (April–December 2020) during the COVID-19 period and compared it with the 8 months in the pre-COVID period (April–November 2019). Despite decreasing the number of admissions during the COVID era (hospitalizations showed a reduction of 43.79%), the total hospital nosocomial infections remained unchanged; 4.73% in the pre-COVID period versus 4.78% during the COVID period. During the COVID period the infection percentages increased in the cardiovascular care unit (p-value = 0.002) and intensive care units (p-value = 0.045), and declined in cardiology (p-value = 0.046) and neurology (p-value = 0.019) wards. This study showed that intensifying the infection prevention protocols is important in decreasing the nosocomial infections in some wards (cardiology and neurology). Still, we saw increased nosocomial infection in some wards, e.g., the intensive care unit (ICU) and coronary care unit (CCU). Thus, enhanced infection prevention protocols implemented in hospitals to prevent the spread of a pandemic infection may not always decrease rates of other hospital-acquired infections during a pandemic. Due to limited resources, transfer of staff, and staff shortage due to quarantine measures may prohibit improved prevention procedures from effectively controlling nosocomial infections.
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页码:220 / 226
页数:6
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