Hospital ICUs with the Greatest Need for Comprehensive Infection Policies Don't Have Them, Study by Columbia School of Nursing Finds

Large Hospitals Have Low Adoption of Policies That Prevent Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection

(NEW YORK, NY, Oct. 17, 2012) "��Hospital size matters when it comes to intensive care units (ICUs) adopting even the most routine prevention policies for catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI), according to a new study from researchers at Columbia University School of Nursing, published this month in the American Journal of Infection Control. The study found that large hospitals -- those with more than 500 beds --had a 1.5 higher average rate of CAUTI than hospitals with 500 beds or less. Since larger hospitals, particularly teaching hospitals treat patients who are often sicker, the finding that their ICUs have higher incidences of CAUTI, while still a cause of concern, was not unanticipated.

What was puzzling, say the researchers, is that ICUs in larger hospitals - those with the higher rates of CAUTI -- were less likely to have implemented a CAUTI prevention policy.

"What we find so baffling is that the very hospitals that have the largest rates of CAUTI are not following the clear CAUTI preventive guidelines in their intensive care units," says the study's lead author Laurie J. Conway, RN, MS, CIC.

CAUTIs are common and costly occurrences in US hospitals and have been the target of recent national quality initiatives directed at infections acquired in hospital settings. Over the past 30 years, panels of experts in infection control and hospital epidemiology have been unanimous in placing minimizing unnecessary urinary catheter use at the top of their guidelines. The authors write "that public policy and quality initiatives in place in 2008 appear to have lacked the strength needed to promote real reduction in CAUTI."

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