Can a nasal and skin decolonization protocol safely replace contact precautions for MRSA-colonized patients?

Publication date: Available online 11 January 2020Source: American Journal of Infection ControlAuthor(s): Jacqueline Christie, Don Wright, Jacalyn Liebowitz, Paul StefanacciContact precautions (CP) are employed in United States hospitals in order to prevent transmission of pathogens via supplies, equipment, and health care worker hands. CP is required in many hospitals for both colonized and infected methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) patients. The isolation of colonized patients often results in a high rate of CP, leading some hospitals to abandon CP for MRSA-colonized patients without adding any safety measure to address transmission risk. Understanding this risk, 7 network hospitals in a US health care system made the decision to replace CP for high-risk MRSA-colonized patients with targeted nasal and body decolonization, leading to significant cost savings and staff satisfaction without any increase in MRSA transmission.
Source: American Journal of Infection Control - Category: Infectious Diseases Source Type: research