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    Associations of hospital characteristics with nosocomial pneumonia after cardiac surgery can impact on standardized infection rates

    Access Status
    Fulltext not available
    Authors
    Sanagou, M.
    Leder, K.
    Cheng, A.
    Pilcher, D.
    Reid, Christopher
    Wolfe, R.
    Date
    2015
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Sanagou, M. and Leder, K. and Cheng, A. and Pilcher, D. and Reid, C. and Wolfe, R. 2015. Associations of hospital characteristics with nosocomial pneumonia after cardiac surgery can impact on standardized infection rates. Epidemiology and Infection. 144 (5): pp. 1065-1074.
    Source Title
    Epidemiology and Infection
    DOI
    10.1017/S0950268815002307
    ISSN
    0950-2688
    School
    Department of Health Policy and Management
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13064
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    To identify hospital-level factors associated with post-cardiac surgical pneumonia for assessing their impact on standardized infection rates (SIRs), we studied 43 691 patients in a cardiac surgery registry (2001–2011) in 16 hospitals. In a logistic regression model for pneumonia following cardiac surgery, associations with hospital characteristics were quantified with adjustment for patient characteristics while allowing for clustering of patients by hospital. Pneumonia rates varied from 0·7% to 12·4% across hospitals. Seventy percent of variability in the pneumonia rate was attributable to differences in hospitals in their long-term rates with the remainder attributable to within-hospital differences in rates over time. After adjusting for patient characteristics, the pneumonia rate was found to be higher in hospitals with more registered nurses (RNs)/100 intensive-care unit (ICU) admissions [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 1·2, P = 0·006] and more RNs/available ICU beds (aOR 1·4, P < 0·001). Other hospital characteristics had no significant association with pneumonia. SIRs calculated on the basis of patient characteristics alone differed substantially from the same rates calculated on the basis of patient characteristics and the hospital characteristic of RNs/100 ICU admissions. Since SIRs using patient case-mix information are important for comparing rates between hospitals, the additional allowance for hospital characteristics can impact significantly on how hospitals compare.

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