The next time a contagion sweeps through the NIH Clinical Center, Montgomery County officials will be on it, thanks to a new agreement between NIH, Maryland and Montgomery County. The back-story is that Montgomery County officials were unhappy that they weren’t informed promptly about the deadly KPC outbreak at NIH.
This raises the question of when a hospital should communicate with public health officials (and the public generally) about fairly common SNAFUs. At any given time, 5-10% of hospitals are dealing with clusters or outbreaks of multiple-drug resistant gram negative bacteria (KPCs, ESBLs, MDR-Acinetobacter, etc.), and even more are in the midst of MRSA, VRE, fungal or other outbreaks. The population at risk during these outbreaks is pretty clearly defined, and doesn’t include the general public. General notification can generate media frenzy, free-floating panic and anxiety, and waste precious time and resources for the personnel trying to contain the outbreak (responding to media, doing damage control of various types, etc.). Furthermore, most states don’t include common healthcare associated bacterial pathogens among their legally reportable diseases.
However, as state and local public health officials become increasingly involved in HAI issues, it would be wise to establish explicit criteria for when healthcare facilities should report clusters and outbreaks. Provided they have sufficient funding (which they currently do not!), public health departments should play a critical role in coordinating responses to HAI outbreaks, which often involve multiple healthcare facilities in a region (across the spectrum of acute, long-term, and long-term acute care).
So when do you think a hospital should notify their state and/or local public health department? Two cases of MRSA infection in the NICU? A single serious post-operative Group A strep infection? New introduction of a carbapenemase into the ICU?
Oh, and Happy Thanksgiving!
Pondering vexing issues in infection prevention and control
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