Author:
Lee Bruce Y,Bartsch Sarah M,Lin Michael Y,Asti Lindsey,Welling Joel,Mueller Leslie E,Leonard Jim,Brown Shawn T,Doshi Kruti,Kemble Sarah K,Mitgang Elizabeth A,Weinstein Robert A,Trick William E,Hayden Mary K
Abstract
Abstract
Typically, long-term acute care hospitals (LTACHs) have less experience in and incentives to implementing aggressive infection control for drug-resistant organisms such as carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) than acute care hospitals. Decision makers need to understand how implementing control measures in LTACHs can impact CRE spread regionwide. Using our Chicago metropolitan region agent-based model to simulate CRE spread and control, we estimated that a prevention bundle in only LTACHs decreased prevalence by a relative 4.6%–17.1%, averted 1,090–2,795 new carriers, 273–722 infections and 37–87 deaths over 3 years and saved $30.5–$69.1 million, compared with no CRE control measures. When LTACHs and intensive care units intervened, prevalence decreased by a relative 21.2%. Adding LTACHs averted an additional 1,995 carriers, 513 infections, and 62 deaths, and saved $47.6 million beyond implementation in intensive care units alone. Thus, LTACHs may be more important than other acute care settings for controlling CRE, and regional efforts to control drug-resistant organisms should start with LTACHs as a centerpiece.
Funder
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research
NICHD
Models of Infectious Disease Agent Study
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
8 articles.
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