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National healthcare-associated infections surveillance programs: A scoping review

Étienne Poirier, Virginie Boulanger, Anne MacLaurin, Caroline Quach

2022Canada Communicable Disease Report13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: National surveillance of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) is necessary to identify areas of concern, monitor trends, and provide benchmark rates enabling comparison between hospitals. Benchmark rates require representative and large sample sizes often based on pooling of surveillance data. We performed a scoping review to understand the organization of national HAI surveillance programs globally. Methods: The search strategy included a literature review, Google search and personal communications with HAI surveillance program managers. Thirty-five countries were targeted from four regions (North America, Europe, United Kingdom and Oceania). The following information was retrieved: name of surveillance program, survey types (prevalence or incidence), frequency of reports, mode of participation (mandatory or voluntary), and infections under surveillance. Results: infections (n=17, 60.7%). Conclusion: Most countries analyzed have HAI surveillance programs, with characteristics varying by country. Patient-level data reporting with numerators and denominators is available for almost every surveillance program, allowing for reporting of incidence rates and more refined benchmarks, specific to a given healthcare category thus offering data that can be used to measure, monitor, and improve the incidence of HAIs.

Topics & Concepts

Incidence (geometry)Health careMedicinePublic health surveillanceEnvironmental healthPoolingMedical emergencyFamily medicineGeographyPublic healthNursingComputer sciencePolitical scienceArtificial intelligenceLawPhysicsOpticsSurgical site infection preventionInfection Control in HealthcareNosocomial Infections in ICU
National healthcare-associated infections surveillance programs: A scoping review | Litcius