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Nosocomial infection in surgery wards: A controlled study of increased duration of hospital stays and direct cost of hospitalization

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Abstract

Excess length of hospital stays and associated costs were assessed in patients hospitalized in the department of general and digestive surgery who acquired nosocomial infections. A prospective study of matched infected-uninfected patients nested in a cohort was used to estimate the length of the hospital stay of infected patients. Matched controls were obtained with respect to patient exact primary diagnosis, operative procedure and classification, age and, if possible, underlying disease, elective or emergency procedure and invasive devices. Superficial surgical wound infection prolonged the average hospital stay of the nosocomially infected patient by an average of 12.6 days, wound infection (deep and superficial) by 14.3 days and infections other than wound infection by 7.3 days as compared to the uninfected matched controls.

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Asensio Vegasi, A., Monge Jodra, V. & Lizan Garcia, M. Nosocomial infection in surgery wards: A controlled study of increased duration of hospital stays and direct cost of hospitalization. Eur J Epidemiol 9, 504–510 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00209528

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