The role of intra and inter-hospital patient transfer in the dissemination of heathcare-associated multidrug-resistant pathogens

Publication date: Available online 30 November 2018Source: EpidemicsAuthor(s): T.N. Vilches, M.F. Bonesso, H.M. Guerra, C.M.C.B. Fortaleza, A.W. Park, C.P. FerreiraAbstractHealthcare-associated infections cause significant patient morbidity and mortality, and contribute to growing healthcare costs, whose effects may be felt most strongly in developing countries. Active surveillance systems, hospital staff compliance, including hand hygiene, and a rational use of antimicrobials are among the important measures to mitigate the spread of healthcare-associated infection within and between hospitals. Klebsiella pneumoniae is an important human pathogen that can spread in hospital settings, with some forms exhibiting drug resistance, including resistance to the carbapenem class of antibiotics, the drugs of last resort for such infections. Focusing on the role of patient movement within and between hospitals on the transmission and incidence of enterobacteria producing the Klebsiella pneumoniae Carbapenemase (KPC, an enzyme that inactivates several antimicrobials), we developed a metapopulation model where the connections among hospitals are made using a theoretical hospital network based on Brazilian hospital sizes and locations. The pathogen reproductive number, R0 that measures the average number of new infections caused by a single infectious individual, was calculated in different scenarios defined by both the links between hospital environments (regular wards and intensive car...
Source: Epidemics - Category: Epidemiology Source Type: research