医学
感染控制
重症监护医学
公共卫生
医疗保健
交叉感染
不利影响
急诊医学
内科学
护理部
经济增长
经济
标识
DOI:10.1056/nejmhpr020557
摘要
Nosocomial, or hospital-acquired, infections (more appropriately called health care–associated infections) are today by far the most common complications affecting hospitalized patients. Indeed, the Harvard Medical Practice Study II found that a single type of nosocomial infection — surgical-wound infection — constituted the second-largest category of adverse events.1 Long considered the greatest risk that the hospital environment poses to patients,2 nosocomial infections abruptly became the province of public health officers at the time of a nationwide epidemic of hospital-based staphylococcal infections, in 1957 and 1958.3 Since then, the study and control of nosocomial infections have been profoundly shaped by the discipline . . .
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI