Summary
nTo understand the impact of hospital-acquired infections on mortality
and medical costs in modern
medical care systems in different healthcare settings, we performed a case-control study at a medical centre and two community hospitals. A
total of 144 and 129 adult
case-control pairs who received care in a 2000-bed tertiary referral medical centre and two 800- bed community hospitals,
respectively, between October
2002 and December 2002 were enrolled. Prolongation of hospital stay, extra costs and complications associated with hospital-acquired
infections were analysed.
Patients in the medical centre had more severe underlying disease status (P﹤0:001),more malignancies (P﹤0:001), more multiple episodes of hospital-acquired infection (P=
0:03),and more infections with multidrug-resistant bacteria (P﹤0:001) than patients in community hospitals. The additional length of hospital stay and extra
costs were similar for patients with hospital-acquired infections in the community
hospitals and the medical centre (mean 19.2 days vs. 20.1 days, P=0.79; mean US$ 5335 vs. US$ 5058,
P=0:83; respectively). The additional length of hospital stay and extra costs in both the medical centre and
the community hospitals
were not related to the sites of infection or the bacterial pathogens causing hospital-acquired infections, although medical costs
attributable to
hospital-acquired fungal infections due to Candida spp. were much higher for patients in the medical centre. Prevalence of
hospital-acquired-infection-related complications, such as adult respiratory distress syndrome,
disseminated intravascular
coagulation, organ failure or shock, was similar between the two groups, but patients in the medical centre had a higher mortality rate
because of their underlying
co-morbidities.