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Establishing the prevalence of healthcare-associated infections in Australian hospitals: Protocol for the Comprehensive Healthcare Associated Infection National Surveillance (CHAINS) study

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Version 2 2024-06-04, 09:39
Version 1 2018-11-27, 10:30
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-18, 11:41 authored by PL Russo, A Stewardson, AC Cheng, Tracey BucknallTracey Bucknall, K Marimuthu, BG Mitchell
IntroductionA healthcare-associated infection (HAI) data point prevalence study (PPS) conducted in 1984 in Australian hospitals estimated the prevalence of HAI to be 6.3%. Since this time, there have been no further national estimates undertaken. In the absence of a coordinated national surveillance programme or regular PPS, there is a dearth of national HAI data to inform policy and practice priorities.Methods and analysisA national HAI PPS study will be undertaken based on the European Centres for Disease Control method. Nineteen public acute hospitals will participate. A standardised algorithm will be used to detect HAIs in a two-stage cluster design, random sample of adult inpatients in acute wards and all intensive care unit patients. Data from each hospital will be collected by two trained members of the research team. We will estimate the prevalence of HAIs, invasive device use, single room placement and deployment of transmission-based precautions.Ethics and disseminationEthics approval was obtained from the Alfred Health Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC/17/Alfred/203) via the National Mutual Assessment. A separate approval was obtained from the Tasmanian Health and Medical Human Research Committee (H0016978) for participating Tasmanian hospitals. Findings will be disseminated in individualised participating hospital reports, peer-reviewed publications and conference presentations.

History

Journal

BMJ Open

Volume

8

Article number

ARTN e024924

Pagination

1 - 7

Location

England

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2044-6055

eISSN

2044-6055

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Author(s) (or their employer(s))

Issue

11

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP