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Πέμπτη 16 Φεβρουαρίου 2017

Delayed tuberculosis diagnosis and costs of contact investigations for hospital exposure: New York City, 2010-2014

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Publication date: Available online 16 February 2017
Source:American Journal of Infection Control
Author(s): Ana M. Kelly, John F. D'Agostino, Lilibeth V. Andrada, Jianfang Liu, Elaine Larson
BackgroundA delayed diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) in the hospital may lead to nosocomial exposure, placing employees and other patients at risk. A lack of prompt infection control measures for suspected cases at the time of admission may require complicated and expensive contact investigations. The purpose of this study was to estimate the person-hour costs required by infection control staff to investigate a single hospital-based TB exposure.MethodsElectronic data were extracted from 2 tertiary hospitals and 1 community hospital in a large health care system in metropolitan New York City to identify pulmonary TB cases unsuspected at admission. All cases were reviewed by infection prevention and control (IPC) staff to identify exposures.ResultsFrom 2010-2014, 34 pulmonary TB cases which necessitated a contact investigation were identified. IPC staff calculated an average of 15-20 hours of work per exposure plus 30 minutes of follow-up for each exposed staff member. For exposures, time from admission to isolation averaged 3.3 days, with a mean of 41 staff exposed per patient and an approximate resource usage of 38 person-hours.ConclusionsContact investigations are costly to the health care system. In a low-prevalence country, such as the United States, it is still important that health care providers are trained to think TB.



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