1982
DOI: 10.1097/00003246-198206000-00001
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High risk of hospital-acquired infection in the ICU patient

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Cited by 247 publications
(74 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, clinicians and managers are expected to meet four-hour targets, 1 where no patient would wait more than four hours in an emergency department (ED), from arrival to admission to a bed in the hospital or discharge, with zero tolerance for hospitalacquired infections (HAIs), 2 both of which are associated with patient average length of stay (ALoS). [3][4][5] High bed occupancy is associated with prolonged admission waits from the ED. 6 The latter can be reduced by availability of more empty beds, 7 which requires reducing ALoS that in turn requires increased, yet appropriate, discharges.…”
Section: Rationale For Interventionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, clinicians and managers are expected to meet four-hour targets, 1 where no patient would wait more than four hours in an emergency department (ED), from arrival to admission to a bed in the hospital or discharge, with zero tolerance for hospitalacquired infections (HAIs), 2 both of which are associated with patient average length of stay (ALoS). [3][4][5] High bed occupancy is associated with prolonged admission waits from the ED. 6 The latter can be reduced by availability of more empty beds, 7 which requires reducing ALoS that in turn requires increased, yet appropriate, discharges.…”
Section: Rationale For Interventionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The human body enables survival of a wide variety of microorganisms with potential for causing infection (Burke, 1961). In circumstance where systemic host resistance is lowered, such as immunosuppression from medication, disruption of intact cutaneous or mucous membrane as a result of surgical procedures or trauma, patients' bacterial flora may become opportunistic and cause infection (Donowitz et al, 1982;Koontz, 2000).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although in the UK most units are mixed with medical, surgical and trauma patients, other units are specialized, catering only for cardiac surgery or neurosurgery patients for example. In mixed ICU's infection has been reported in between 18 and 360% of patients [1,21], whereas in cardiac surgery ICU infection rates are much lower -in the order of 1-2 % [22].…”
Section: The Patientsmentioning
confidence: 99%