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Author Shaban, Ramon Z., author

Title Epidemiology of healthcare-associated infections in Australia / Ramon Z. Shaban, Brett G. Mitchell, Philip L. Russo, Deborough Macbeth
Published Chatswood, N.S.W. : Elsevier, 2021

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Executive summary -- Surgical site infection -- Urinary tract infection -- Pneumonia -- Bloodstream infection -- Central line and peripheral line-associated bloodstream infection -- Multi-resistant organisms -- Infection associated with prosthetics and implantable devices -- Gastrointestnial infection
Summary Endorsed by the Australasian College for Infection Prevention and Control (ACIPC) ACIPC is the peak body for infection prevention and control professionals in the Australasian region. Healthcare-associated Infections (HAIs) are a major threat to patient safety and the quality of healthcare globally. Despite this, Australia does not have a nationally coordinated program for the surveillance and reporting of HAIs. Epidemiology of Healthcare-associated Infections in Australia is Australia's first peer-reviewed, evidence-based assessment of the epidemiology of HAIs using publicly available data from hospital-acquired complications (HACs), state-based surveillance systems and peer-reviewed and grey literature sources. This important work has been compiled by some of Australia's leading infection control professionals and researchers. It will build national consensus on definitions, surveillance methodology and reporting of the incidence of HAIs. In doing so, it provides hospitals and those working in infection prevention and control an opportunity to benchmark and evaluate interventions to reduce infections and ensure transparency on reporting methods that will strengthen Australia's efforts to prevent and control HAIs. Here is a great article published in Sydney Morning Herald on the publication of Epidemiology of Healthcare-associated infections in Australia. Collated publicly available HAI surveillance definitions from jurisdictions across Australia Collated publicly available national HACs HAI data derived from the associated surveillance programs Identification of the gaps in both publicly available HAI data from different sources and the lack of publicly available HAI surveillance data in one serialised title Supporting video summarising key content Available in eBook format with print-on-demand option
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (ScienceDirect, viewed March 4, 2021)
Subject Nosocomial infections -- Epidemiology
Nosocomial infections -- Prevention
Nosocomial infections -- Epidemiology
Nosocomial infections -- Prevention
Form Electronic book
Author Mitchell, Brett, author
Russo, Philip L., author
Macbeth, Deborough, author