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Vital Signs: Preventing Clostridium difficile Infections

Abstract

Background: Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) is a common and sometimes fatal health-care–associated infection; the incidence, deaths, and excess health-care costs resulting from CDIs in hospitalized patients are all at historic highs. Meanwhile, the contribution of nonhospital health-care exposures to the overall burden of CDI, and the ability of programs to prevent CDIs by implementing CDC recommendations across a range of hospitals, have not been demonstrated previously.

Methods: Population-based data from the Emerging Infections Program were analyzed by location and antecedent health-care exposures. Present-on-admission and hospital-onset, laboratory-identified CDIs reported to the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) were analyzed. Rates of hospital-onset CDIs were compared between two 8-month periods near the beginning and end of three CDI prevention programs that focused primarily on measures to prevent intrahospital transmission of C. difficile in three states (Illinois, Massachusetts, and New York).

Results: Among CDIs identified in Emerging Infections Program data in 2010, 94% were associated with receiving health care; of these, 75% had onset among persons not currently hospitalized, including recently discharged patients, outpatients, and nursing home residents. Among CDIs reported to NHSN in 2010, 52% were already present on hospital admission, although they were largely health-care related. The pooled CDI rate declined 20% among 71 hospitals participating in the CDI prevention programs.

Conclusions: Nearly all CDIs are related to various health-care settings where predisposing antibiotics are prescribed and C. difficile transmission occurs. Hospital-onset CDIs were prevented through an emphasis on infection control.

Implications for Public Health: More needs to be done to prevent CDIs; major reductions will require antibiotic stewardship along with infection control applied to nursing homes and ambulatory-care settings as well as hospitals. State health departments and partner organizations have shown leadership in preventing CDIs in hospitals and can prevent more CDIs by extending their programs to cover other health-care settings.

Introduction

Clostridium difficile is an anaerobic, spore-forming bacillus that causes pseudomembranous colitis, manifesting as diarrhea that often recurs and can progress to toxic megacolon, sepsis, and death. Infection is spread by the fecal-oral route; spores, the infective form, can persist on fomites and environmental surfaces for months. Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) often occurs in patients in health-care settings, where antibiotics are prescribed and symptomatic patients, an important source for transmission, are concentrated. From 2000 to 2009, the number of hospitalized patients with any CDI discharge diagnoses more than doubled, from approximately 139,000 to 336,600, and the number with a primary CDI diagnosis more than tripled, from 33,000 to 111,000 (1). Although the incidence of other health-care–associated infections has declined (2), CDIs have increased and only recently plateaued (1). Evidence-based guidelines for the prevention of CDIs in hospitals have been published (3). However, because the evidence for many of these recommendations is weak (4) the degree to which they can prevent CDIs effectively across a range of hospitals is unknown, as is the relative burden of CDIs in nonhospital and hospital health-care settings.

Methods

In this investigation, three data sources were used to identify health-care exposures for CDIs, determine the proportion of CDIs occurring outside hospital settings, and assess whether prevention programs can effectively reduce CDIs. CDC's Emerging Infections Program conducted active, population-based surveillance for CDIs from eight diverse geographic areas in 2010 (5). Program surveillance coordinators received laboratory reports of positive stool C. difficile tests from residents of catchment areas. Cases were defined by a positive C. difficile test in a person without a positive test during the previous 8 weeks (repeat positive tests during this period suggest recurrence) (6). Medical records were reviewed to confirm the presence of symptoms consistent with CDI and to record all health-care exposures during the 12 weeks preceding specimen collection (i.e., minimum duration of antibiotic-induced susceptibility to CDI). CDIs were classified by the patient's location at the time of stool specimen collection and divided into three groups: 1) hospital-onset CDI, occurring in a hospitalized patient with a positive stool specimen collected more than 3 days after admission; 2) nursing home–onset CDI, occurring in a nursing home resident with a positive stool specimen collected at any time during their stay; and 3) community-onset CDI, occurring in an outpatient or an inpatient of any health-care facility with a positive stool specimen collected within 3 days (the median incubation period of C. difficile) after admission. Community-onset CDI cases were subcategorized based on previous health-care exposures during the 12 weeks preceding specimen collection; previous inpatient exposures took precedence over outpatient exposures when classifying cases.

A second data source was the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Multidrug-Resistant Organism and Clostridium difficile Infection module for laboratory-identified (LabID)-CDI events, which became available in March 2009 (7). Incident LabID-CDI events in NHSN are based on positive C. difficile test results from hospital patients who did not have a previous positive test result reported within that facility during the preceding 8 weeks. LabID-CDI events present on admission were defined by a positive stool specimen collected within the first 3 days of admission; a subset was delineated further if patients were discharged from the reporting hospital in the preceding 4 weeks, during which time previous hospitalization is most likely to influence the risk for CDI (6,7). Rates of hospital-onset CDI cases were calculated per 10,000 patient-days.

The third set of data included early results from three state-led programs (Illinois, Massachusetts, and New York) similar to other programs in which hospitals collaborated with one another to prevent health-care–associated infections (8) (in this case, hospital-onset CDIs). The three programs included a total of 71 hospitals focused on preventing CDIs during three different periods ranging from 19 to 22 months.* Although the systems for data collection and behavioral change strategies varied among programs, all three used CDC surveillance definitions (6) and focused primarily on infection control interventions to prevent transmission of C. difficile; the Massachusetts program did include antibiotic stewardship as a minor component. Using a negative binomial model, rates of hospital-onset CDI from hospitals participating in the three programs were compared between two same-calendar-month, 8-month periods (to control for seasonal variation in rates), one earlier and the other later in the conduct of each program.

Results

The Emerging Infections Program population under surveillance included persons in the catchment areas of 111 acute-care hospitals and 310 nursing homes. A total of 10,342 CDIs were identified; 44% of patients were aged <65 years. CDIs were classified by inpatient or outpatient status at time of stool collection and type/location of exposures (Figure 1). Overall, 94% of all CDIs were related to various precedent and concurrent health-care exposures; of these, 75% had their onset outside of hospitals. In addition, some cases occurred in patients who were exposed to multiple settings. For example, 20% of hospital-onset CDIs occurred in recent (i.e., <12 weeks) residents of a nursing home, and 67% of nursing home–onset CDI cases occurred in patients recently discharged from an acute-care hospital.

A total of 711 acute care hospitals in 28 states conducted facility-wide inpatient LabID-CDI event reporting to NHSN in 2010 (Table 1). A total of 42,157 incident LabID-CDI events were reported (Figure 2). Overall, 52% of LabID-CDI events were already present on admission to hospitals. The pooled rate of hospital-onset CDI was 7.4 per 10,000 patient-days, with a median hospital rate of 5.4 per 10,000 and an interquartile range of 6.2.

The pooled hospital-onset CDI rate across the three prevention programs declined 20%, from 9.3 per 10,000 patient-days during the early comparison period to 7.5 during the later comparison period (rate ratio: 0.80) (Table 2).

Conclusions and Comment

The incidence, mortality, and medical care costs of CDIs have reached historic highs (1,3,9,10). The estimated number of deaths attributed to CDI, based on multiple cause-of-death mortality data, increased from 3,000 deaths per year during 1999–2000 to 14,000 during 2006–2007, with more than 90% of deaths in persons aged ≥65 years (10). Recent excess health-care costs of hospital-onset CDI are estimated to be $5,042–$7,179 per case with a national annual estimate (limited to the subset of hospital-onset CDIs only) of $897 million to $1.3 billion (11). Much of the recent increase in the incidence and mortality of CDIs is attributed to the emergence and spread of a hypervirulent, resistant strain of C. difficile that produces greater quantities of principal virulence toxins A and B and has additional factors enhancing its virulence (9,12). Nonetheless, many of these infections can be prevented, as demonstrated by the 20% reduction in incidence of hospital-onset CDI among three state prevention programs conducted over approximately 21 months. In England, where a national campaign to publicly report and prevent CDIs was implemented in 2007 through an emphasis on antibiotic stewardship as well as infection control (13), pooled hospital-onset CDI rates declined 56% during a 3-year period (2008–2011) (14). In the United States, the National Action Plan for Prevention of HAIs has targeted a 30% reduction of CDIs in acute-care hospitals by 2015 (15).

Principal recommendations to prevent CDI include improving antibiotic use, early and reliable detection of CDI, isolation of symptomatic patients, and reducing C. difficile contamination of health-care environmental surfaces (3). Good antibiotic stewardship is an important aspect of quality health care that prevents CDI. Antibiotic use increases the risk for developing CDI by seven- to 10-fold while the patient is taking the antibiotic and for 1 month after discontinuation, and by approximately three-fold for the subsequent 2 months (16). CDC provides tools for facilities to develop antibiotic stewardship programs.

To prevent transmission of C. difficile, early detection and isolation of patients with CDI is essential. Nucleic acid amplification tests can be as much as twice as sensitive as enzyme immunoassays and can detect CDI more accurately when used in populations with an appropriate pretest probability (i.e., patients with more than three unformed stools in a 24-hour period without an identified cause) (3,17). Because of their increased sensitivity, nucleic acid amplification tests will yield higher hospital-onset CDI rates. Currently, 35% of NHSN hospitals are using nucleic acid amplification tests (Table 1); risk adjustment will be necessary to compare rates accurately where diagnostic testing practices vary.

C. difficile frequently is transmitted between patients via hands of health-care personnel transiently contaminated after contact with symptomatic patients or their surrounding environment. Glove use, with strict adherence to changing between patient contacts, is the best proven method for preventing hand contamination with C. difficile from symptomatic patients (3,4). Health-care environmental services have a key role in reducing contamination that can directly transmit to patients or contaminate the hands of health-care personnel.§ Because C. difficile spores resist killing by usual hospital disinfectants, an Environmental Protection Agency–registered disinfectant with a C. difficile sporicidal label claim should be used to augment thorough physical cleaning.

These findings emphasize how the risk for CDI from antibiotic exposure and transmission moves with patients across multiple health-care settings, leading to the interdependence of health-care settings in a region to lower their CDI rates. Because antibiotics disrupt the normally protective bacterial populations of the lower intestine in a manner that increases risk for CDI for 3 or more months, antibiotics received in one setting often predispose a patient to develop CDI in another. In contrast, because the incubation period is a median of only 2–3 days (3), acquisition of C. difficile is overall more likely to have occurred in the setting where symptoms have their onset and CDI is diagnosed. Meanwhile, CDIs present on hospital admission are most often related to the care delivered in other inpatient or outpatient facilities; because they are an important source for intrahospital transmission, CDIs present on admission are a risk factor for higher hospital-onset CDI rates (18).

The findings of this report are subject to at least six limitations. First, data on antibiotic exposure, which are important for targeting prevention efforts, were not available. An NHSN option designed to address this problem is undergoing piloting with electronic health record vendors.** Second, data on potential underlying temporal trends in prevention program hospitals were not available. Third, the various methods used to implement prevention strategies in the prevention hospitals were not described (e.g., staff training, assessment and feedback of compliance with isolation precautions, or adequacy of environmental cleaning). Although the pooled rate toward the end of these programs (7.5 per 10,000 patient-days) was similar to the rate across all NHSN hospitals in 2010 (7.4), the three programs started and ended at different rates, suggesting that locally tailored approaches to prevention might be beneficial. Fourth, the impact of ongoing CDI prevention initiatives under way during the early phase of evaluation also was not assessed. Fifth, the potential impact of any shifts in test sensitivity between different methods used (e.g., nucleic acid amplification versus enzyme immunoassay) was not assessed. Finally, in both the Emerging Infections Program and NHSN, the setting of onset was based on where the patient was located at the time of stool specimen collection; therefore, there might have been misclassification of cases if a marked delay occurred between onset of symptoms and stool specimen collection.

Because nearly 75% of all CDIs related to U.S. health care have their onset outside of hospitals, more needs to be done to prevent CDIs across all health-care settings. For its part, CDC is working to improve NHSN LabID-CDI event reporting for nursing homes as well as hospitals. Clinical document architecture specifications are available for electronic health record system vendors to use in enabling their systems to serve as electronic data sources for LabID-CDI event reporting to NHSN.†† The option to report electronically will take on greater importance as increasing numbers of hospitals are required to report LabID-CDI events to NHSN. Currently, six states (California, Illinois, New York, Oregon, Tennessee, and Utah) mandate public reporting of facility-wide LabID-CDI events. Beginning in 2013, all hospitals participating in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' Inpatient Prospective Payment System Quality Reporting Program will be required to report facility-wide LabID-CDI events using NHSN to qualify for their 2015 annual payment update; public reporting of hospital rates will begin in 2014 at the Hospital Compare website (19).

Clinicians and other health-care providers, as well as inpatient and outpatient health-care facilities, state and federal public health officials (e.g., the Partnership for Patients), and partner patient safety organizations, could benefit from increased collaboration in preventing CDIs. Such collaborations could broaden and enhance the use of prevention strategies and do so across the entire spectrum of U.S. health-care delivery. State health departments, working with regional quality improvement organizations, hospital associations, and other nongovernmental patient safety partners, are positioned uniquely to work across these multiple settings.§§ Given the emphasis of current health-care reform efforts to improve patient safety while reducing costs, now is an opportune time to begin to eliminate health-care–associated CDIs.

Reported by

L. Clifford McDonald, MD, Fernanda Lessa, MD, Dawn Sievert, PhD, Matt Wise, PhD, Rosa Herrera, Carolyn Gould, MD, Paul Malpiedi, MPH, Maggie Dudeck, MPH, Arjun Srinivasan, MD, Scott Fridkin, MD, Denise Cardo, MD, Div of Healthcare Quality Promotion, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, CDC. Corresponding contributor: L. Clifford McDonald, cmcdonald1@cdc.gov, 404-639-3833.

Acknowledgments

Iowa Foundation for Medical Care–Illinois, Oakbrook; Illinois Dept of Public Health. Massachusetts Coalition for the Prevention of Medical Errors; the Massachusetts Dept of Public Health. Greater New York Hospital Association; United Hospital Fund; New York State Dept of Health. Hospitals and staff members reporting to the National Healthcare Safety Network. Amit Chitnis, MD, EIS Officer; principal investigators and surveillance staff members, Emerging Infections Program, CDC.

References

  1. Lucado J, Gould C, Elixhauser A. Clostridium difficile infections (CDI) in hospital stays, 2009. HCUP statistical brief no. 124. Rockville, MD: US Department of Health and Human Services, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; 2011. Available at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/statbriefs/sb124.pdf. Accessed February 2, 2012.
  2. CDC. Vital signs: central line-associated blood stream infections— United States, 2001, 2008, and 2009. MMWR 2011;60:243–8.
  3. Cohen SH, Gerding DN, Johnson S, et al. Clinical practice guidelines for Clostridium difficile infection in adults: 2010 update by the society for healthcare epidemiology of America (SHEA) and the infectious diseases society of America (IDSA). Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2010;31:431–55.
  4. Butler M, Bliss D, Drekonja D, et al. Effectiveness of early diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of Clostridium difficile infection. Rockville, MD: US Department of Health and Human Services, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; 2011. Available at http://www.effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/ehc/products/115/822/cer-31_cdiff_execsummary_20111220.pdf. Accessed March 1, 2012.
  5. CDC. EIP surveillance methodology for Clostridium difficile infections. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2012.
  6. McDonald LC, Coignard B, Dubberke E, Song X, Horan T, Kutty PK. Recommendations for surveillance of Clostridium difficile-associated disease. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2007;28:140–5.
  7. National Healthcare Safety Network. Multidrug-resistant organism and Clostridium difficile infection (MDRO/CDI) module. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2009. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/mdro_cdad.html. Accessed February 2, 2012.
  8. CDC. Reduction in central line-associated bloodstream infections among patients in intensive care units—Pennsylvania, April 2001–March 2005. MMWR 2005;54:1013–6.
  9. McDonald LC, Killgore GE, Thompson A, et al. An epidemic, toxin gene-variant strain of Clostridium difficile. N Engl J Med 2005;353:2433–41.
  10. Hall AC, Curns AT, McDonald LC, Parashar UD, Lopman BA. The roles of norovirus and Clostridium difficile among gastroenteritis deaths in the United States, 1999–2007. Presentation at the 49th Annual Meeting of the Infectious Disease Society of America; October 22, 2011; Boston, MA.
  11. Dubberke ER, Reske KA, Olsen MA, McDonald LC, Fraser VJ. Short- and long-term attributable costs of Clostridium difficile-associated disease in nonsurgical inpatients. Clin Infect Dis 2008;46:497–504.
  12. Warny M, Pepin J, Fang A, et al. Toxin production by an emerging strain of Clostridium difficile associated with outbreaks of severe disease in North America and Europe. Lancet 2005;366:1079–84.
  13. Duerden BI. Contribution of a government target to controlling Clostridium difficile in the NHS in England. Anaerobe 2011;17:175–9.
  14. Health Protection Agency (United Kingdom). Quarterly epidemiological commentary: mandatory MRSA & MSSA bacteraemia, and Clostridium difficile infection data (up to July – September 2011). London, England: Health Protection Agency; 2011. Available at http://www.hpa.org.uk/webc/hpawebfile/hpaweb_c/1284473407318. Accessed February 2, 2012.
  15. US Department of Health and Human Services. HHS action plan to prevent healthcare-associated infections. Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services; 2009. Available at http://www.hhs.gov/ash/initiatives/hai/actionplan. Accessed February 2, 2012.
  16. Hensgens MP, Goorhuis A, Dekkers OM, Kuijper EJ. Time interval of increased risk for Clostridium difficile infection after exposure to antibiotics. J Antimicrob Chemother 2011; December 6 [Epub ahead of print].
  17. Swindells J, Brenwald N, Reading N, Oppenheim B. Evaluation of diagnostic tests for Clostridium difficile infection. J Clin Microbiol 2010;48:606–8.
  18. Zilberberg MD, Tabak YP, Sievert DM, et al. Using electronic health information to risk-stratify rates of Clostridium difficile infection in US hospitals. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2011;32:649–55.
  19. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Medicare program; hospital inpatient prospective payment systems for acute care hospitals and the long-term care hospital prospective payment system and FY 2012 rates; hospitals' FTE resident caps for graduate medical education payment. Baltimore, MD: US Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; 2011. Available at http://www.cms.gov/acuteinpatientpps/fr2012/itemdetail.asp?itemid=cms1250103. Accessed February 2, 2012.

* The Illinois prevention program, led by the Department of Public Health and the Iowa Foundation for Medical Care–Illinois (a health-care quality improvement organization headquartered in West Des Moines, Iowa), included 11 hospitals with complete data from the beginning of March 2010 through October 2011. The Massachusetts program, led by the Massachusetts Coalition for the Prevention of Medical Errors and the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, included 27 hospitals with complete data from January 2010 through September 2011. The New York program, led by the Greater New York Hospital Association and the United Hospital Fund in collaboration with the New York State Department of Health, included 33 hospitals with complete data from March 2008 through December 2009.

Additional information available at http://www.cdc.gov/getsmart/healthcare/improve-efforts/clinicians.html.

§ Additional information available at http://www.cdc.gov/hai/toolkits/evaluating-environmental-cleaning.html.

Additional information available at http://www.epa.gov/oppad001/cdif-guidance.html.

** Additional information available at http://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/psc_ma.html.

†† Additional information available at http://www.cdc.gov/nhsn/cda_esurveillance.html.

§§ Additional information available at http://www.cdc.gov/hai/stateplans/haistateplans-map.html.


Key Points

  • Clostridium difficile infections (CDIs) increased several fold in the past decade and became more serious, but are nonetheless preventable.
  • Of all CDIs, 94% are related to health-care exposures and are potentially preventable by reducing unnecessary antibiotic use and interrupting patient-to-patient transmission of C. difficile.
  • CDIs were reduced by 20% over approximately 21 months by 71 hospitals participating in prevention programs focused primarily on infection control strategies (e.g. early reliable detection, isolation, and enhanced environmental cleaning).
  • Of all health-care–associated CDIs, 75% have their onset outside of hospitals, and 52% of the CDIs treated in hospitals are present on admission; these infections are a potential source for intrahospital transmission.
  • More must be done to prevent CDIs by various stakeholders working together to expand prevention strategies, including a greater focus on antibiotic stewardship and extending prevention strategies in settings across the continuum of health-care delivery.

FIGURE 1. Percentage of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) cases (N = 10,342), by inpatient or outpatient status at time of stool collection and type/location of exposures* — United States, Emerging Infections Program, 2010

The figure shows the percentage of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) cases (N = 10,342), by inpatient or outpatient status at time of stool collection and type/location of exposures, in the United States during 2010, based on data from the Emerging Infections Program. The population under surveillance included persons in the catchment areas of 111 acute-care hospitals and 310 nursing homes. A total of 10,342 CDIs were identified. CDIs were classified by inpatient or outpatient status at time of stool collection and type/location of exposures. Overall, 94% of all CDIs were related to various antecedent and concurrent health-care exposures; of these, 75% had their onset outside of hospitals. In addition, some cases occurred in patients who were exposed to multiple settings. For example, 20% of hospital-onset CDIs occurred in recent (i.e., <12 weeks) residents of a nursing home, and 67% of nursing home-onset CDI cases occurred in patients recently discharged from an acute-care hospital.

* CDIs were classified by the patient's location at the time of stool specimen collection and divided into three groups: 1) hospital-onset CDI, occurring in a hospitalized patient with a positive stool specimen collected more than 3 days after admission; 2) nursing home–onset CDI, occurring in a nursing home resident with a positive stool specimen collected at any time during their stay; and 3) community-onset CDI, occurring in an outpatient or an inpatient of any health-care facility with a positive stool specimen collected within 3 days (the median incubation period of C. difficile) after admission. Community-onset CDI cases were subcategorized based on previous health-care exposures during the 12 weeks preceding specimen collection; previous inpatient exposures took precedence over outpatient exposures when classifying cases.

Alternate Text: The figure above shows the percentage of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) cases (N = 10,342), by inpatient or outpatient status at time of stool collection and type/location of exposures, in the United States during 2010, based on data from the Emerging Infections Program. The population under surveillance included persons in the catchment areas of 111 acute-care hospitals and 310 nursing homes. A total of 10,342 CDIs were identified. CDIs were classified by inpatient or outpatient status at time of stool collection and type/location of exposures. Overall, 94% of all CDIs were related to various antecedent and concurrent health-care exposures; of these, 75% had their onset outside of hospitals. In addition, some cases occurred in patients who were exposed to multiple settings. For example, 20% of hospital-onset CDIs occurred in recent (i.e., <12 weeks) residents of a nursing home, and 67% of nursing home-onset CDI cases occurred in patients recently discharged from an acute-care hospital.


TABLE 1. Number and percentage of hospitals reporting laboratory-identified Clostridium difficile infections, by selected characteristics — United States, National Healthcare Safety Network, 2010

Characteristic

No.

(%)

Total

711

(100)

Bed size

≤200

429

(61)

201–500

232

(33)

501–1000

46

(6)

>1000

1

(<0.5)

Medical school affiliation

226

(31)

Primary diagnostic assay used

Enzyme immunoassay for toxin A and/or B

364

(51)

Nucleic acid amplification test

238

(33)

Other

88

(12)

Missing data

21

(3)


FIGURE 2. Percentage of laboratory-identified Clostridium difficile infections (N = 42,157), by hospitalization status at time of stool collection and type/location of exposure — United States, National Healthcare Safety Network, 2010

The figure shows the percentage of laboratory-identified Clostridium difficile infections (LabID-CDIs) (N = 42,157), by hospitalization status at time of stool collection and type/location of exposure in the United States, during 2010, based on data from the National Healthcare Safety Network. Surveillance was conducted over approximately 27.6 million patient days. A total of 42,157 incident LabID-CDIs were reported. Overall, 52% of LabID-CDIs events were already present on admission to hospitals. The pooled rate of hospital onset CDI was 7.4 per 10,000 patient-days, with a median hospital rate of 5.4 per 10,000 and an interquartile range of 6.2.

* From reporting hospital during the preceding 4 weeks.

Alternate Text: The figure above shows the percentage of laboratory-identified Clostridium difficile infections (LabID-CDIs) (N = 42,157), by hospitalization status at time of stool collection and type/location of exposure in the United States, during 2010, based on data from the National Healthcare Safety Network. Surveillance was conducted over approximately 27.6 million patient days. A total of 42,157 incident LabID-CDIs were reported. Overall, 52% of LabID-CDIs events were already present on admission to hospitals. The pooled rate of hospital onset CDI was 7.4 per 10,000 patient-days, with a median hospital rate of 5.4 per 10,000 and an interquartile range of 6.2.


TABLE 2. Reductions in hospital-onset Clostridium difficile infection rates — Illinois, Massachusetts, and New York, May 2008–October 2011*

State

Period

Patient days

Rate

(95% CI*)

Rate ratio

(95% CI)

Illinois

Mar 2010–Oct 2010

637,135

11.6

(10.3–13.0)

0.84

(0.70–1.00)

Mar 2011–Oct 2011

578,121

9.9

(8.4–11.4)

Massachusetts

Feb 2010–Sep 2010

823,939

7.6

(6.7–8.5)

0.75

(0.63–0.90)

Feb 2011–Sep 2011

830,023

5.7

(4.9–6.5)

New York

May 2008–Dec 2008

2,607,464

9.2

(8.5–9.9)

0.81

(0.73–0.89)

May 2009–Dec 2009

2,575,514

7.5

(7.0–8.0)

Overall

Pooled baseline

4,068,538

9.3

(8.7–9.8)

0.80

(0.73–0.86)

Pooled post

3,983,658

7.5

(7.0–7.9)

Abbreviation: CI = confidence interval.

* Study periods vary by state.


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