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Benchmarking of healthcare-associated infections in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states
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Medical Microbiology & Diagnosis

ISSN: 2161-0703

Open Access

Benchmarking of healthcare-associated infections in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states


International Conference on Medical and Clinical Microbiology

July 03-04, 2017 Bangkok, Thailand

Aiman El-Saed and Hanan H Balkhy

King Abdulaziz Medical City, KSA
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) States Center for Infection Prevention & Control, KSA

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Med Microb Diagn

Abstract :

Statement of the Problem: Although there are few international benchmarks for the Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAI), several methodological and logistic issues make the use of such benchmarks unfair. It has been long suggested to establish a local benchmark for Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states that consider the challenges of the newly established regional surveillance programs. The purpose of this project was to set a GCC benchmark to promote standardized surveillance in the hospitals of the GCC countries. Methodology: The GCC Center for Infection Control located in Riyadh (Saudi Arabia) did several activities to promote standard surveillance methodology for the GCC countries. This included publishing a surveillance manual, creating unique data collection forms, organizing multiple educational and training activities, and data auditing and validation on-site visits. Aggregate HAI surveillance data were pooled from 6 hospitals in three GCC countries; Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Bahrain. Standardized infection ratio (SIR) of HAIs in GCC hospitals were calculated using published reports of the US National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) and International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC). Findings: We have published major benchmarking reports on ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP) and catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) in the American Journal of Infection Control. A third report about central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI) is in the process of publication. A common finding from the three reports confirm that the risk of HAIs including VAP, CAUTI, and CALBSI in GCC countries is higher than pooled U.S. VAP rates but lower than pooled rates from developing countries participating in the INICC. Conclusion & Significance: Although we have accomplished a distinguished step towards setting a regional benchmark, more efforts are still needed to improve regional collaboration in HAI surveillance activities. We are currently working on recruiting more facilities to submit data for future larger-scale benchmarking reports on HAIs and antimicrobial resistance.

Biography :

Email: amest30@yahoo.com

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 14

Medical Microbiology & Diagnosis received 14 citations as per Google Scholar report

Medical Microbiology & Diagnosis peer review process verified at publons

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