Publications by authors named "Luci Perri"

This SHEA white paper identifies knowledge gaps and challenges in healthcare epidemiology research related to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) with a focus on core principles of healthcare epidemiology. These gaps, revealed during the worst phases of the COVID-19 pandemic, are described in 10 sections: epidemiology, outbreak investigation, surveillance, isolation precaution practices, personal protective equipment (PPE), environmental contamination and disinfection, drug and supply shortages, antimicrobial stewardship, healthcare personnel (HCP) occupational safety, and return to work policies. Each section highlights three critical healthcare epidemiology research questions with detailed description provided in supplementary materials.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Efforts to reduce health care-associated infections (HAIs) have grown in both scale and sophistication over the past few decades; however, the increasing threat of antimicrobial resistance and the impact of new legislation regarding HAIs on health care economics make the fight against them all the more urgent. On-demand polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology has proven to be a highly effective weapon in this fight, offering the ability to accurately and efficiently identify disease-causing pathogens such that targeted and directed therapy can be initiated at the point of care. As a result, on-demand PCR technology has far-reaching influences on HAI rates, health care outcomes, hospital length of stay, isolation days, patient satisfaction, antibiotic stewardship, and health care economics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study analyzed the effectiveness of the OraQuick Rapid HIV-1 Antibody Test in occupational exposure scenarios, focusing on its impact on post-exposure treatment, cost savings, and its influence on healthcare worker stress.
  • Results showed that the OraQuick test had a perfect agreement with traditional tests and significantly reduced the number of doses of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) needed, leading to an average savings of $6.62 per exposure.
  • While the use of OraQuick did not significantly lower overall stress among healthcare workers, fewer workers in that group experienced repetitive thoughts about the exposure compared to those using the older test.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF