Last data update: May 13, 2024. (Total: 46773 publications since 2009)
Records 1-5 (of 5 Records) |
Query Trace: Peterson KD[original query] |
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National Healthcare Safety Network report, data summary for 2013, device-associated Module
Dudeck MA , Edwards JR , Allen-Bridson K , Gross C , Malpiedi PJ , Peterson KD , Pollock DA , Weiner LM , Sievert DM . Am J Infect Control 2015 43 (3) 206-21 This report is a summary of Device-associated (DA) Module data collected by hospitals participating in the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) for events occurring from January through December 2013 and reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by June 1, 2014. This report updates previously published DA Module data from NHSN and provides contemporary comparative rates.1 Figure 1 provides a brief summary of highlights from this report. This report complements other NHSN reports, including national and state-specific progress reports for select healthcare-associated infections (HAIs).2 |
National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) report, data summary for 2012, Device-associated module
Dudeck MA , Weiner LM , Allen-Bridson K , Malpiedi PJ , Peterson KD , Pollock DA , Sievert DM , Edwards JR . Am J Infect Control 2013 41 (12) 1148-66 This report is a summary of Device-associated (DA) Module data collected by hospitals participating in the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) for events occurring from January through December 2012 and reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by July 1, 2013. This report updates previously published DA Module data from NHSN and provides contemporary comparative rates.1 Figure 1 provides a brief summary of key findings from this report. This report complements other NHSN reports, including national and state-specific reports of standardized infection ratios (SIRs) for select healthcare-associated infections (HAIs).2, 3 |
National Healthcare Safety Network report, data summary for 2011, device-associated module
Dudeck MA , Horan TC , Peterson KD , Allen-Bridson K , Morrell G , Anttila A , Pollock DA , Edwards JR . Am J Infect Control 2013 41 (4) 286-300 This report is a summary of Device-associated (DA) Module data collected by hospitals participating in the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) for events occurring from January through December 2011 and reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by August 1, 2012. This report updates previously published DA Module data from NHSN and provides contemporary comparative rates.1 This report complements other NHSN reports, including national and state-specific reports of standardized infection ratios (SIRs) for select healthcare-associated infections (HAIs).2,3,4 | NHSN data collection, reporting, and analysis are organized into three components: Patient Safety, Healthcare Personnel Safety, and Biovigilance, and use standardized methods and definitions in accordance with specific module protocols.5,6,7 Institutions may use modules singly or simultaneously, but once selected, they must be used for a minimum of one calendar month for the data to be included in CDC analyses. All infections are categorized using standard CDC definitions that include laboratory and clinical criteria.7 The DA Module may be used by facilities other than hospitals, including outpatient dialysis centers. A report of data from this module for outpatient dialysis centers was published separately.8 NHSN facilities contributing HAI surveillance data to this report did so voluntarily, in response to state mandatory reporting requirements or in compliance with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program. CDC aggregated these data into a single national database for 2011, consistent with the stated purposes of NHSN, which were to: | Collect data from a sample of healthcare facilities in the United States to permit valid estimation of the magnitude of adverse events among patients and healthcare personnel. | Collect data from a sample of healthcare facilities in the United States to permit valid estimation of the adherence to practices known to be associated with prevention of these adverse events. | Analyze and report collected data to permit recognition of trends. | Provide facilities with risk-adjusted metrics that can be used for inter-facility comparisons and local quality improvement activities. | Assist facilities in developing surveillance and analysis methods that permit timely recognition of patient and healthcare worker safety problems and prompt intervention with appropriate measures. | Conduct collaborative research studies with NHSN member facilities (e.g., describe the epidemiology of emerging healthcare-associated infection [HAI] and pathogens, assess the importance of potential risk factors, further characterize HAI pathogens and their mechanisms of resistance, and evaluate alternative surveillance and prevention strategies). | Comply with legal requirements – including but not limited to state or federal laws, regulations, or other requirements – for mandatory reporting of healthcare facility-specific adverse event, prevention practice adherence, and other public health data. | Enable healthcare facilities to report HAI and prevention practice adherence data via NHSN to the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) in fulfillment of CMS’s quality measurement reporting requirements for those data. | Provide state departments of health with information that identifies the healthcare facilities in their state that participate in NHSN. | Provide to state agencies, at their request, facility-specific, NHSN patient safety component and healthcare personnel safety component adverse event and prevention practice adherence data for surveillance, prevention, or mandatory public reporting. | Patient- and facility-specific data reported to CDC are kept confidential in accordance with sections 304, 306, and 308(d) of the Public Health Service Act (42 USC 242b, 242k, and 242m(d)). |
National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) report, data summary for 2009, device-associated module
Dudeck MA , Horan TC , Peterson KD , Allen-Bridson K , Morrell GC , Pollock DA , Edwards JR . Am J Infect Control 2011 39 (5) 349-367 This report is a summary of Device-Associated (DA) module data collected by hospitals participating in the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) for events occurring between January and December 2009 and reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by October 18, 2010. This report updates previously published DA module data from the NHSN and provides contemporary comparative rates.1 Procedure-Associated module data will be reported separately. Surgical site infection data will be reported as standardized infection ratios using new logistic regression models, and postprocedure pneumonia rates for 2009 are available on the NHSN's public Web site. This report complements other NHSN reports, including national and state-specific standardized infection ratios for selected health care–associated infections (HAIs).2, 3, 4 | The NHSN was established in 2005 to integrate and supersede 3 legacy surveillance systems at the CDC: the National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance system, the Dialysis Surveillance Network, and the National Surveillance System for Healthcare Workers. NHSN data collection, reporting, and analysis are organized into 3 components—Patient Safety, Healthcare Personnel Safety, and Biovigilance—and use standardized methods and definitions in accordance with specific module protocols.5, 6, 7 The modules may be used singly or simultaneously, but once selected, they must be used for a minimum of 1 calendar month. All infections are categorized using standard CDC definitions that include laboratory and clinical criteria.7 The DA module may be used by facilities other than hospitals, including long-term care facilities and outpatient dialysis centers. A report of data from this module for outpatient dialysis centers has been published separately.8 For this report, only data from the Patient Safety component are presented. NHSN facilities report their HAI surveillance data voluntarily or in response to state mandatory reporting requirements. The CDC aggregates these data into a single national database for the stated purposes in place in 2009, as follows: | • | Collect data from a sample of US health care facilities to permit valid estimation of the magnitude of adverse events among patients and health care personnel. | • | Collect data from a sample of US health care facilities to permit valid estimation of the adherence to practices known to be associated with prevention of these adverse events. | • | Analyze and report collected data to permit recognition of trends. | • | Provide facilities with risk-adjusted metrics that can be used for interfacility comparisons and local quality improvement activities. | • | Assist facilities in developing surveillance and analysis methods that permit timely recognition of patient and health care worker safety problems and prompt intervention with appropriate measures. | • | Conduct collaborative research studies with NHSN member facilities (eg, describe the epidemiology of emerging HAIs and pathogens, assess the importance of potential risk factors, further characterize HAI pathogens and their mechanisms of resistance, and evaluate alternative surveillance and prevention strategies). | | The identity of each NHSN facility is kept confidential by the CDC in accordance with Sections 304, 306, and 308(d) of the Public Health Service Act [42 USC 242b, 242K, and 242m(d)]. |
National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) report: data summary for 2006 through 2008, issued December 2009
Edwards JR , Peterson KD , Mu Y , Banerjee S , Allen-Bridson K , Morrell G , Dudeck MA , Pollock DA , Horan TC . Am J Infect Control 2009 37 (10) 783-805 This report is a summary of Device-Associated (DA) and Procedure-Associated (PA) module data collected and reported by hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers participating in the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) from January 2006 through December 2008 as reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by July 6, 2009. This report updates previously published DA and PA module data from the NHSN.1 | The NHSN was established in 2005 to integrate and supersede 3 legacy surveillance systems at the CDC: the National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance (NNIS) system, the Dialysis Surveillance Network (DSN), and the National Surveillance System for Healthcare Workers (NaSH). Similar to the NNIS system, NHSN facilities voluntarily report their health care–associated infection (HAI) surveillance data for aggregation into a single national database for the following purposes: | • | Estimation of the magnitude of HAIs | • | Monitoring of HAI trends | • | Facilitation of interfacility and intrafacility comparisons with risk-adjusted data that can be used for local quality improvement activities | • | Assistance to facilities in developing surveillance and analysis methods that permit timely recognition of patient safety problems and prompt intervention with appropriate measures. | | In addition, many facilities use these same data to comply with state reporting mandates. Identity of all NHSN facilities is kept confidential by the CDC in accordance with Sections 304, 306, and 308(d) of the Public Health Service Act [42 USC 242b, 242k, and 242m(d)]. |
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