作者
Damian Mawer,Fintan Byrne,S Drake,Christopher Brown,Andrew Prescott,Ben Warne,Rachel Bousfield,Jordan P. Skittrall,Isobel Ramsay,Donald Somasunderam,Melody G. Bevan,J. Coslett,Jiaming Rao,Peter Stanley,Andrew Kennedy,Richard Dobson,Samuel Long,T. Obisanya,T. Esmailji,Christina Petridou,Kordo Saeed,K. Brechany,K. Davis-Blue,H. O'Horan,Bruce Wake,Jose Ignacio González Martín,James Featherstone,Charlotte Hall,Jessica L. Allen,G. Johnson,C. Hornigold,Nurhidayah Amir,Kevin Henderson,Catriona McClements,Ignatius Liew,Anvay Deshpande,Elen Vink,D. Trigg,John Guilfoyle,Matthew Scarborough,Claire Scarborough,T.H.N. Wong,Timothy M. Walker,Nicola Fawcett,Guy Morris,Keith Tomlin,C. Grix,E. O'Cofaigh,D. McCaffrey,Mark E. Cooper,Kantaake Corbett,K. A. French,Sam Harper,Christopher Hayward,Matthew Reid,Vanessa Whatley,Jeffrey A. Winfield,Seikh Azimul Hoque,Len Kelly,Ingrid King,Alexander T. Bradley,Bernadette McCullagh,Carina Hibberd,M. Merron,Colm McCabe,S. Horridge,Jenna L. Taylor,So-My Koo,Fadwa Elsanousi,Rachel Saunders,Felicia H. Lim,Ashley Bond,Sarah Stone,Iain Milligan,Dietrich Mack,Aaron Nagar,Robert West,Mark H. Wilcox,Andrew Kirby,Jonathan Sandoe
摘要
The National Health Service in England advises hospitals collect data on hospital-onset diarrhoea (HOD). Contemporaneous data on HOD are lacking.To investigate prevalence, aetiology and management of HOD on medical, surgical and elderly-care wards.A cross-sectional study in a volunteer sample of UK hospitals, which collected data on one winter and one summer day in 2016. Patients admitted ≥72 h were screened for HOD (definition: ≥2 episodes of Bristol Stool Type 5-7 the day before the study, with diarrhoea onset >48 h after admission). Data on HOD aetiology and management were collected prospectively.Data were collected on 141 wards in 32 hospitals (16 acute, 16 teaching). Point-prevalence of HOD was 4.5% (230/5142 patients; 95% confidence interval (CI) 3.9-5.0%). Teaching hospital HOD prevalence (5.9%, 95% CI 5.1-6.9%) was twice that of acute hospitals (2.8%, 95% CI 2.1-3.5%; odds ratio 2.2, 95% CI 1.7-3.0). At least one potential cause was identified in 222/230 patients (97%): 107 (47%) had a relevant underlying condition, 125 (54%) were taking antimicrobials, and 195 (85%) other medication known to cause diarrhoea. Nine of 75 tested patients were Clostridium difficile toxin positive (4%). Eighty (35%) patients had a documented medical assessment of diarrhoea. Documentation of HOD in medical notes correlated with testing for C. difficile (78% of those tested vs 38% not tested, P<0.001). One-hundred and forty-four (63%) patients were not isolated following diarrhoea onset.HOD is a prevalent symptom affecting thousands of patients across the UK health system each day. Most patients had multiple potential causes of HOD, mainly iatrogenic, but only a third had medical assessment. Most were not tested for C. difficile and were not isolated.