National group to study pediatric infections
National group to study pediatric infections
A national consortium of children’s hospitals is forming to better detect and prevent nosocomial infections and antibiotic-resistant pathogens in pediatric patients, project planners report.
Coordinated by the National Association of Children’s Hospitals and Related Institutions (NACHRI) in Alexandria, VA, the project will be funded for its first year with a $200,000 cooperative agreement from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The program currently includes 36 hospitals nationally, including 11 where program pilot testing was done and 25 additional facilities that will participate in data gathering.
"The first thing that we are doing is a survey of all the participating hospitals to identify the various hospital characteristics in general, and those related to infection control," says Shirley Girouard, PhD, RN, FAAN, vice president of child health and financing at NACHRI.
The survey will assess such demographics as staffing, budget, surveillance activities, electronic communication methods, organization, and program processes, she notes.
"This will give us a real baseline on where people are in terms of their structures and processes that relate to nosocomial infections and antimicrobial resistant infections," she tells Hospital Infection Control.
More specific projects involving clinical practice are expected to follow, including possibly developing standards for infection control in children’s hospitals, she adds.
"The money from the CDC is for basic, operational support for the cooperative agreement, but we will need to seek other funding to do additional research," she says. "To really do anything major, we’re going to be looking for other sources of support."
Researchers report that multiple factors contribute to the differences in nosocomial infections in infants and young children and those in adults. Differences include host factors, sources of infection, routes of transmission, and distribution of pathogens.1 Host factors contributing to risk for nosocomial infection include congenital abnormalities and immaturity of the immune system, especially in newborns and premature infants. The rates of nosocomial infections in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) have been reported to be as high as 7% to 25%. (See Journal Reviews, p. 14.)
"This is a promising opportunity to identify effective infection prevention interventions specifically for those caring for children," says William Jarvis, MD, acting director of the CDC hospital infections program.
NACHRI is a not-for-profit membership association of 154 acute care children’s hospitals, large pediatric units of major medical centers, and related organizations.
[Editor’s note: Pediatric ICPs or others interested in participating in the program can contact NACHRI via phone: (703) 684-1355; fax: (703) 684-1589; or by writing to 401 Wythe St., Alexandria, VA 22314.]
Reference
1. Harris JS. Pediatric nosocomial infections: Children are not little adults. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 1997; 18:739-742.
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