The Journal of hospital infection
-
In this study we describe the prevalence and frequency of risk factors for meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) colonization in emergency admissions during a one-year MRSA screening programme. Overall, 7801/13 826 (56.4%) adult emergency admissions by 6469 patients were screened for MRSA. Of those screened, 670/7801 (8.6%) admissions by 433 patients (6.7%) were colonized with MRSA. ⋯ We conclude that there is a high MRSA colonization rate among emergency admissions, especially those with risk factors. Using a selective risk factor based screening strategy more than 60% of the patients would have to be screened but still 3952/6469, 67 (15.5%) MRSA carriers would have been missed. Screening of all emergency admissions to detect MRSA colonization is preferable to selective screening, relatively inexpensive, and might reduce the MRSA colonization rate of hospital-acquired MRSA and MRSA bacteraemia among emergency admissions.
-
Although the prevalence of tuberculosis continues to decline in most developed countries, the risk of healthcare-associated tuberculosis, remains for patients or healthcare staff. Outbreaks of healthcare-associated tuberculosis are usually associated with delays in diagnosis and treatment, or the care of patients in sub-optimal facilities. The control and prevention of tuberculosis in hospitals is best achieved by three approaches, namely administrative (early investigation diagnosis, etc.), engineering (physical facilities e.g. ventilated isolation rooms) and personal respiratory protection (face sealing masks which are filtered). ⋯ Even when policies and facilities are optimal, there is a need to regularly review and audit these as sometimes compliance is less than optimal. The differences in recommendations may reflect the variations in epidemiology and the greater use of BCG vaccination in the UK compared with the United States. There is a strong argument for advising ventilated facilities and personal respiratory protection for the care of all patients with tuberculosis, as multi-drug tuberculosis may not always be apparent on admission, and these measures minimise transmission of all cases of TB to other patients and healthcare staff.