Epidemiology of Hospital Infections

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Definitions & Significance - Defining Lurking Dangers

  • Hospital-Acquired Infection (HAI) / Nosocomial Infection:
    • Infection acquired during hospital stay; not present/incubating at admission.
    • Onset typically >48 hours post-admission. For Surgical Site Infections (SSI), up to 30 days post-op (or 1 year if implant involved).
  • Common Types of HAIs (Full Forms):
    • CAUTI: Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection
    • SSI: Surgical Site Infection
    • VAP: Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
    • CLABSI: Central Line-Associated Bloodstream Infection
  • Significance & Burden:
    • Major cause of ↑morbidity, ↑mortality.
    • Leads to prolonged hospital stays, ↑antimicrobial resistance (AMR), & ↑economic burden (significant in India).
  • Basic Epidemiological Terms (Hospital Context):
    • Endemic: Usual, persistent presence of an HAI.
    • Epidemic: Sudden ↑ in cases above endemic levels.
    • Outbreak: Localized epidemic (e.g., single ward/unit).

⭐ Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI) are the most common type of HAI globally.

Icons for common hospital acquired infections

Pathogens & Spread - Germs on the Go

  • Common Pathogens & Infections:

    • Bacteria: 📌 Mnemonic: ESKAPE (Enterococcus, Staphylococcus, Klebsiella, Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas, Enterobacterales)
      • S. aureus (MRSA): Common in SSIs, VAP, BSIs.
      • Enterococci (VRE): Cause UTIs, BSIs, wound infections.
      • Pseudomonas aeruginosa: Opportunistic; VAP, UTIs, burn wounds.
      • Acinetobacter baumannii: Multidrug-resistant; VAP, BSIs.
      • E. coli: Leading cause of UTIs, also SSIs, BSIs.
      • Klebsiella pneumoniae: Causes UTIs, pneumonia (VAP), BSIs.
    • Viruses:
      • Influenza virus: Seasonal respiratory infections.
      • Norovirus: Highly contagious gastroenteritis.
    • Fungi:
      • Candida spp.: Fungal; UTIs, BSIs (Candidemia), especially in immunocompromised.
  • Reservoirs/Sources:

    • Endogenous: Patient's own flora (skin, gut).
    • Exogenous: HCWs (hands), environment (surfaces, equipment), other patients.
  • Modes of Transmission:

    • Contact: Most common.
      • Direct: HCW ↔ patient.
      • Indirect: Fomites (instruments, bed rails).
    • Droplet: Large particles (>5 micrometers), short distance (<1 m) (e.g., Influenza).
    • Airborne: Small particles (<5 micrometers), long distance (e.g., Legionella from water).

Human pathogen transmission routes

⭐ Hand hygiene is the single most effective measure to prevent the spread of HAIs.

Vulnerability & Vigilance - Spotting Susceptibility & Stats

Risk Factors for HAIs:

Host FactorsHealthcare-associated/Iatrogenic Factors
Age extremes (infants, elderly)Invasive devices (catheters, vents)
Immunosuppression (HIV, steroids)Prolonged hospital stay, ICU admission
Chronic diseases (diabetes, CKD)Antimicrobial misuse (prophylaxis/tx)
MalnutritionHCW non-compliance (hand hygiene)
Prior broad-spectrum antibioticsContaminated environment/equipment

HAI Surveillance:

  • Objectives: Monitor HAI trends, detect outbreaks, evaluate prevention/control interventions, identify new risks.
  • Methods:
    • Active: Proactive data collection (e.g., chart reviews, direct observation). More accurate, resource-intensive.
    • Passive: Relies on routine reporting (e.g., lab reports). Less resource-intensive, prone to underreporting.
    • Hospital-wide (all patients/HAIs) vs. Targeted (specific units/HAIs like ICU VAP).

Key Epidemiological Measures:

  • Incidence Density: Measures new HAIs per unit of exposure time.
    • E.g., Device-associated HAI rate: $Incidence\ Density = (\frac{Number\ of\ new\ HAIs}{Total\ device-days}) \times 1000$ (infections per 1000 device-days).
  • Prevalence Rate: Proportion of patients with an HAI at a specific point in time.
    • Calculated as: $Prevalence = (\frac{Number\ of\ existing\ HAIs\ at\ a\ point\ in\ time}{Total\ number\ of\ patients\ at\ that\ point\ in\ time}) \times 100$.
  • Standard definitions (e.g., CDC/NHSN) are vital for comparability.

⭐ Device utilization ratio (device-days / patient-days) is crucial for interpreting device-associated HAI rates, as it reflects the extent of device use.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs), often catheter-associated, are the most frequent HAIs.
  • Staphylococcus aureus (especially MRSA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Enterobacteriaceae (e.g., E. coli, Klebsiella) are leading pathogens.
  • Invasive procedures and indwelling devices (urinary catheters, central lines, ventilators) are major risk factors.
  • Effective hand hygiene is the cornerstone of HAI prevention.
  • Contact transmission (direct and indirect) is the most common route for HAI spread.
  • Multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) like MRSA, VRE, and ESBL-producers pose significant therapeutic challenges.

Practice Questions: Epidemiology of Hospital Infections

Test your understanding with these related questions

Which infection commonly spreads to newborns through caregivers?

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Flashcards: Epidemiology of Hospital Infections

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Hospital acquired MRSA is mediated by mecA subtype _____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Hospital acquired MRSA is mediated by mecA subtype _____

I, II, III

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