Conference Coverage

ESBL-resistant bacteria spread in hospital despite strict contact precautions


 

REPORTING FROM ECCMID 2018

The incidence density of ward-acquired ESBL-E per 1,000 patient-days at risk was 4.6 in both intervention periods, regardless of the type of precaution taken. Contact precautions appeared to be slightly less effective for Escherichia coli (3.6 per 1,000 patient-days in contact precautions vs. 3.5 in standard), compared with Klebsiella pneumoniae (1.8 vs. 2.2).

A multivariate analysis controlled for screening compliance, colonization pressure, and length of stay, study site, and season of year. It showed that strict contact precautions did not reduce the risk of ward-acquired ESBL-E carriage.

Dr. Maechler had no financial disclosures. The R-Gnosis study was funded by the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme.

SOURCE: Maechler F et al. ECCMID 2018, Oral Abstract O1130.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Reported penicillin allergies hike inpatient costs
MDedge Internal Medicine
Preoperative penicillin allergy tests could decrease SSI
MDedge Internal Medicine
Prehospital antibiotics improved some aspects of sepsis care
MDedge Internal Medicine
Bile spillage during lap cholecystectomy comes with a price
MDedge Internal Medicine
Complication rates rise after decline in uterine fibroid morcellation
MDedge Internal Medicine
Robotic approach falls short for sleeve gastrectomy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Piperacillin-tazobactam tripled risk of death for patients with cephalosporin-resistant septicemia
MDedge Internal Medicine