Surveillance of Infections and Antibiotic Use in 21 Nursing Home Wards during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Systematic Assessment
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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Date
2024Metadata
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Original version
10.3390/ijerph21030358Abstract
Residents in nursing homes are fragile and at high risk of serious illness or death from
healthcare-associated infections. The COVID-19 pandemic posed a significant risk of suffering
and mortality for residents of nursing homes. Surveillance of infections is essential for infection
prevention and is missing in many countries. The aim of this study is to explore infection rates and
antibiotic use in nursing homes during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data collection was conducted from
February to September 2021. Each week, healthcare workers at 21 nursing home wards answered a
questionnaire on infections, antibiotic use, deaths, and hospital admissions related to infections. A
total of 495 infections were reported, and 97.6% were treated with antibiotics. The total infection rate
was 5.37 per 1000 bed days, and there were reported 53 hospital admissions and 11 deaths related to
or caused by infections. The infection rate and high use of antibiotics found in this study indicated
that it is difficult to treat infections in residents in nursing homes and make it difficult to achieve the
global goal of reducing infections and antibiotic resistance rates. This emphasizes the need for stricter
infection control programs to reduce antibiotic use and patient suffering.