In long-term care facilities in Maryland, two thirds of mechanically ventilated patients were colonized with A. baumannii.
Nosocomial infection with multidrug-resistant organisms is a challenge in intensive care units. Colonized patients are a high-risk source of patient-to-patient transmission. Two organisms of particular concern are Acinetobacter baumannii and Candida auris (a highly resistant organism recently identified in the U.S.).
Investigators in Maryland performed a prevalence study of nearly 500 patients in the state's 40 hospitals and 18 ventilator-capable long-term care facilities. On a specified date, each facility obtained cultures of sputum, perianal, and axilla/groin for A. baumannii and arm/leg for C. auris from all patients who were receiving mechanical ventilation.
More than half of the facilities had at least one patient with A. baumannii, inc…
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DisclosuresEditorial BoardsATS Scholar
DisclosuresEditorial BoardsATS Scholar