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Healthcare Epidemiology: Hospital Staffing and Health Care–Associated Infections: A Systematic Review of the Literature
Author(s) -
Patricia W. Stone,
Monika PogorzelskaMaziarz,
Laureen M. Kunches,
Lisa R. Hirschhorn
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1086/591696
Subject(s) - staffing , health care , medicine , epidemiology , audit , infection control , nursing , systematic review , family medicine , medline , intensive care medicine , business , biology , accounting , economics , economic growth , biochemistry
In the past 10 years, many researchers have examined relationships between hospital staffing and patients' risk of health care-associated infection (HAI). To gain understanding of this evidence base, a systematic review was conducted, and 42 articles were audited. The most common infection studied was bloodstream infection (n=18; 43%). The majority of researchers examined nurse staffing (n=38; 90%); of these, only 7 (18%) did not find a statistically significant association between nurse staffing variable(s) and HAI rates. Use of nonpermanent staff was associated with increased rates of HAI in 4 studies (P<.05). Three studies addressed infection control professional staffing with mixed results. Physician staffing was not found to be associated with patients' HAI risk (n=2). The methods employed and operational definitions used for both staffing and HAI varied; despite this variability, trends were apparent. Research characterizing effective staffing for infection control departments is needed.

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