• Home
  • About Us
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Newsroom
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
  • Current Issue
    • Latest News
    • Special Report
    • Up Close
    • Opinion
  • News by Sector
    • Real Estate & Construction
    • Banking & Finance
    • Health Care
    • Education & Talent
    • North Idaho
    • Technology
    • Manufacturing
    • Retail
    • Government
  • Roundups & Features
    • Calendar
    • People
    • Business Licenses
    • Q&A Profiles
    • Cranes & Elevators
    • Retrospective
    • Insights
    • Restaurants & Retail
  • Supplements & Magazines
    • Book of Lists
    • Building the INW
    • Market Fact Book
    • Economic Forecast
    • Best Places to Work
    • Partner Publications
  • E-Edition
  • Journal Events
    • Elevating the Conversation
    • Workforce Summit
    • Icons
    • Women in Leadership
    • Rising Stars
    • Best Places to Work
    • People of Influence
    • Business of the Year Awards
  • Podcasts
  • Sponsored
Home » Hospitals' infection testing practices vary a lot, study shows

Hospitals' infection testing practices vary a lot, study shows

About 40 percent say they don't screen routinely for MRSA, similar organisms

October 25, 2012
News Wise

Screening practices for multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) in intensive care units vary widely from hospital to hospital, says a new study by researchers at Columbia University School of Nursing and published in the October 2012 issue of theAmerican Journal of Infection Control.

Researchers found that of the hospitals surveyed, more than half (59 percent) routinely screened for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aurea, or MRSA. Other potentially deadly MDROs were screened for far less frequently: vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (22 percent), gram-negative rods (12 percent), and C. difficile (11 percent).

The survey showed that not all hospitals follow a comprehensive screening and surveillance policy for infectious disease in the ICU, including the isolation of at-risk patients both during and after laboratory tests for infection. For example, although almost all of the ICUs (98 percent) reported a policy for contact precautions following a positive culture, less than a third reported a policy requiring isolation/contact precautions pending screening results.

While lead author Dr. Monika Pogorzelska-Maziarz believes hospitals should tailor their response to the types and frequency of infection in their local areas, she thinks that some measures included in her study make good sense from a precaution perspective.

"It seems prudent to isolate possibly infected patients admitted into the ICU until lab tests come back giving an 'all clear,'" she says.

The researchers found that a larger infection-control staff and longer infection-control staffing hours were associated with better implementation of policy to isolate culture-positive patients. They also found that ICUs with mandatory reporting and electronic surveillance systems were more likely to have a policy of periodic screening for infection after admission.

The research was supported by a National Institute of Nursing Research grant.

Columbia University School of Nursing is part of the Columbia University Medical Center, which also includes the College of Physicians & Surgeons, the Mailman School of Public Health, and the College of Dental Medicine. The nursing school has about 100 full-time faculty members and 600 students.

    Special Report
    • Related Articles

      Study shows decline in fatal cardiac arrests at hospitals

      Study says thigh fat slows seniors, leads to health risks

      Brain-preserving method not being used often in hospitals

    News Wise

    Mayo Clinic seeks to dispel myths about ovarian cancer

    More from this author
    Daily News Updates

    Subscribe today to our free E-Newsletters!

    SUBSCRIBE

    Featured Poll

    Going into the second half of 2025, what economic factor will you be monitoring most closely?

    Popular Articles

    • Five below store exterior 1 web
      By Dylan Harris

      Five Below plans new store in Spokane Valley

    • Rite aid3 web
      By Journal of Business Staff

      Two Spokane Rite Aid stores to close

    • 40.13 fc art
      By Tina Sulzle

      $165 million development planned at CDA National Reserve

    • Cat tales13 web
      By Karina Elias

      What's Going on with: Cat Tales Wildlife Center

    • Berries49 web
      By Tina Sulzle

      Café to open in former tattoo parlor space in Valley

    • News Content
      • News
      • Special Report
      • Up Close
      • Roundups & Features
      • Opinion
    • More Content
      • E-Edition
      • E-Mail Newsletters
      • Newsroom
      • Special Publications
      • Partner Publications
    • Customer Service
      • Editorial Calendar
      • Our Readers
      • Advertising
      • Subscriptions
      • Media Kit
    • Other Links
      • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Journal Events
      • Privacy Policy
      • Tri-Cities Publications

    Journal of Business BBB Business Review allianceLogo.jpg CVC_Logo-1_small.jpg

    All content copyright ©  2025 by the Journal of Business and Northwest Business Press Inc. All rights reserved.

    Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing