Hand hygiene noncompliance and the cost of hospital-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infection.

dc.contributor.author

Cummings, Keith L

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Anderson, Deverick J

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Kaye, Keith S

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United States

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2011-06-21T17:27:18Z

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2010-04

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BACKGROUND: Hand hygiene noncompliance is a major cause of nosocomial infection. Nosocomial infection cost data exist, but the effect of hand hygiene noncompliance is unknown. OBJECTIVE: To estimate methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)-related cost of an incident of hand hygiene noncompliance by a healthcare worker during patient care. DESIGN: Two models were created to simulate sequential patient contacts by a hand hygiene-noncompliant healthcare worker. Model 1 involved encounters with patients of unknown MRSA status. Model 2 involved an encounter with an MRSA-colonized patient followed by an encounter with a patient of unknown MRSA status. The probability of new MRSA infection for the second patient was calculated using published data. A simulation of 1 million noncompliant events was performed. Total costs of resulting infections were aggregated and amortized over all events. SETTING: Duke University Medical Center, a 750-bed tertiary medical center in Durham, North Carolina. RESULTS: Model 1 was associated with 42 MRSA infections (infection rate, 0.0042%). Mean infection cost was $47,092 (95% confidence interval [CI], $26,040-$68,146); mean cost per noncompliant event was $1.98 (95% CI, $0.91-$3.04). Model 2 was associated with 980 MRSA infections (0.098%). Mean infection cost was $53,598 (95% CI, $50,098-$57,097); mean cost per noncompliant event was $52.53 (95% CI, $47.73-$57.32). A 200-bed hospital incurs $1,779,283 in annual MRSA infection-related expenses attributable to hand hygiene noncompliance. A 1.0% increase in hand hygiene compliance resulted in annual savings of $39,650 to a 200-bed hospital. CONCLUSIONS: Hand hygiene noncompliance is associated with significant attributable hospital costs. Minimal improvements in compliance lead to substantial savings.

dc.description.version

Version of Record

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20184440

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1559-6834

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/4141

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eng

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en_US

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Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol

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10.1086/651096

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Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology

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Academic Medical Centers

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Cross Infection

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Guideline Adherence

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Hand Disinfection

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Health Personnel

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Hospital Costs

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Humans

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Hygiene

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Infection Control

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Infectious Disease Transmission, Professional-to-Patient

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Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus

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North Carolina

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Staphylococcal Infections

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Hand hygiene noncompliance and the cost of hospital-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infection.

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dc.type

Journal article

duke.date.pubdate

2010-4-0

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4

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31

pubs.author-url

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20184440

pubs.begin-page

357

pubs.end-page

364

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4

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Clinical Science Departments

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Duke

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Medicine

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Medicine, Infectious Diseases

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School of Medicine

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

31

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