AI Article Synopsis

  • Hospital-acquired urinary tract infections (HAUTI), especially those related to catheters (CAUTI), are common in hospitals and require surveillance to manage and reduce infections.
  • The study compared surveillance criteria for HAUTI and CAUTI from the Israeli Ministry of Health (IMOH) and the U.S. CDC, involving 644 patients with positive urine cultures in 2017.
  • Results showed that HAUTI rates were higher per IMOH guidelines, with a significant discrepancy in diagnosis methods that emphasizes the need for a uniform surveillance approach globally to better allocate resources and improve outcomes.

Article Abstract

Hospital-acquired urinary tract infections (HAUTI) are common and most cases are related to catheters (CAUTI). HAUTI and CAUTI surveillance is mandatory in many countries as a measure to reduce the incidence of infections and appropriately direct the allocation of preventable resources. The surveillance criteria issued by the Israeli Ministry of Health (IMOH), differ somewhat from that of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Our study aims were to query and quantify the impact of these differences. In a retrospective cohort study conducted at Shamir Medical Center, for calendar year 2017, the surveillance criteria of both IMOH and CDC were applied on 644 patient-unique adults with "positive" urine cultures (per similar definitions). The incidence of HAUTI per IMOH was significantly higher compared to CDC (1.24/1000 vs. 1.02/1000 patient-days, = 0.02), with no impact on hospitalization's outcomes. The agreement rate between methods was high for CAUTI (92%), but much lower for all HAUTI (83%). The major error rate, i.e., patients diagnosed with HAUTI per IMOH but had no UTI per CDC, was 31%. To conclude, in order for surveillance to reflect the relative situation and direct allocation of preventable resources based on scientific literature, the process should be uniform worldwide.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8532618PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10101262DOI Listing

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