Tt. Perls et M. Herget, HIGHER RESPIRATORY-INFECTION RATES ON AN ALZHEIMERS SPECIAL CARE UNITAND SUCCESSFUL INTERVENTION, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 43(12), 1995, pp. 1341-1344
OBJECTIVE: To determine the rates of various types of infections on an
Alzheimer's special care unit (ASCU) compared with the rates found on
traditional nursing home units. Because patients on the ASCUs are all
owed to wander throughout the unit and typically come into contact wit
h each other more frequently, we hypothesized that the rate of communi
cable infections such as upper respiratory infections are significantl
y higher than on other units where patients are more easily isolated w
hen sick. METHODS: A 4-year retrospective case control study, 1990-199
3. SETTING: A metropolitan long-term care skilled nursing facility. Th
ree floors are traditional nursing care units (123 beds), and one floo
r is the ASCU (41 beds). PRIMARY OUTCOME: Annual nosocomial infection
rates per 10,000 patient days were measured for six types of infection
during the 1990-1993 study period. Data were segregated by location o
f infection, either the traditional nursing units or the ASCU. In 1992
, patients on the Alzheimer's unit were placed in smaller activity gro
ups, and an education program for the control of infectious agents was
provided to the unit's staff. RESULTS: The relative order of prevalen
ce for the different infection types remained constant during the 4 ye
ars. The most common type of infection for all 4 years of the study pe
riod was urinary tract infection (UTI), followed by upper respiratory
infection (URI), Lower respiratory tract infection (LRI), cutaneous in
fection, gastrointestinal (GI) infection, and eye infection. Of these
various infections, only URI rates remained consistently higher on the
ASCU versus the traditional nursing unit over the 4-year study period
(in years 1990, 1991, and 1993; these differences were statistically
significant, P < .05). In 1992, the year in which nursing intervention
s to curb the relatively high rates of URI on the ASCU took place, the
rates of URI on the two unit types were not statistically different.
CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that an inherent risk of ASCUs is an
increased exposure to highly contagious infections such as upper respi
ratory infections. An intervention program effective in decreasing thi
s risk to the level of traditional nursing units is proposed. A prospe
ctive study is needed to confirm these findings.