Advanced Search
Display options
Filter resources
Text Availability
Article type
Publication date
Species
Language
Sex
Age
Showing 1 to 12 of 16 entries
Sorted by: Best Match Show Resources per page
A pseudo outbreak of tuberculosis.

Communicable disease report. CDR review

Shears P, Rhodes LE, Syed Q, Watson J.
PMID: 7509240
Commun Dis Rep CDR Rev. 1994 Jan 07;4(1):R9-10.

Three cases of suspected tuberculosis were diagnosed over a ten day period at an oncology unit. Case finding was carried out and six further cases were diagnosed. However, doubts were raised about these diagnoses and a review of the...

Quality improvement projects targeting health care-associated infections: comparing Virtual Collaborative and Toolkit approaches.

Journal of hospital medicine

Speroff T, Ely EW, Greevy R, Weinger MB, Talbot TR, Wall RJ, Deshpande JK, France DJ, Nwosu S, Burgess H, Englebright J, Williams MV, Dittus RS.
PMID: 21312329
J Hosp Med. 2011 May;6(5):271-8. doi: 10.1002/jhm.873. Epub 2011 Feb 10.

BACKGROUND: Collaborative and toolkit approaches have gained traction for improving quality in health care.OBJECTIVE: To determine if a quality improvement virtual collaborative intervention would perform better than a toolkit-only approach at preventing central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs) and ventilator-associated...

ECDC definitions and methods for the surveillance of healthcare-associated infections in intensive care units.

Intensive care medicine

Plachouras D, Lepape A, Suetens C.
PMID: 29797028
Intensive Care Med. 2018 Dec;44(12):2216-2218. doi: 10.1007/s00134-018-5113-0. Epub 2018 May 24.

No abstract available.

Re: Moore et al., Detection of SARS-CoV-2 within the healthcare environment: a multicentre study conducted during the first wave of the COVID-19 outbreak in England, Journal of Hospital Infection 2020;108:189-196.

The Journal of hospital infection

Robalo Nunes T, Zanella MC, Cordey S, Kaiser L, Harbarth S.
PMID: 33359900
J Hosp Infect. 2021 Mar;109:125-126. doi: 10.1016/j.jhin.2020.12.014. Epub 2020 Dec 24.

No abstract available.

[Diagnosis of hospital infections in pediatrics].

Kinderkrankenschwester : Organ der Sektion Kinderkrankenpflege

Ludwig AC.
PMID: 8788556
Kinderkrankenschwester. 1996 May;15(5):181-3.

No abstract available.

An assessment of selective surveillance methods for detecting hospital-acquired infection.

The American journal of medicine

Glenister H, Taylor L, Bartlett C, Cooke M, Sedgwick J, Leigh D.
PMID: 1928152
Am J Med. 1991 Sep 16;91(3):121S-124S. doi: 10.1016/0002-9343(91)90356-3.

Three selective surveillance methods were compared to a reference method in their ability to detect hospital-acquired infection (HAI) in patients occupying 122 beds of a district general hospital. The time for data collection was also assessed. The selective methods...

Management of hospital infections.

GP

Duma RJ.
PMID: 5764318
GP. 1969 Jan;39(1):107-13.

No abstract available.

Curbing healthcare-associated infections.

Medicine and health, Rhode Island

Baler RR, Gravenstein S.
PMID: 20957906
Med Health R I. 2010 Sep;93(9):260.

No abstract available.

[Investigation and control of hospital infections].

Ginecologia y obstetricia de Mexico

Arroyo A.
PMID: 5916106
Ginecol Obstet Mex. 1966 May-Jun;21(122):347-51.

No abstract available.

Multilevel competing risks in the evaluation of nosocomial infections: time to move on from proportional hazards and even from hazards altogether.

Critical care (London, England)

Muñoz A, Mongilardi N, Checkley W.
PMID: 25042281
Crit Care. 2014 May 27;18(3):146. doi: 10.1186/cc13892.

A competing risk is an event (for example, death in the ICU) that hinders the occurrence of an event of interest (for example, nosocomial infection in the ICU) and it is a common issue in many critical care studies....

Nosocomial exposure to tuberculosis: a snapshot of South Korea.

The Korean journal of internal medicine

Choi H.
PMID: 34503318
Korean J Intern Med. 2021 Sep;36(5):1061-1062. doi: 10.3904/kjim.2021.367. Epub 2021 Sep 01.

No abstract available.

[Surveillance methods in hospital infections].

Vojnosanitetski pregled

Drndarević D.
PMID: 2238515
Vojnosanit Pregl. 1990 Jul-Aug;47(4):289-93.

In the prevalence study of postoperative pyogenic-inflammatory disease in 1,000 operated patients three parallel controls have been undertaken: comprehensive prospective control, current state and standard control. Current prevalence control has been proved the most suitable, practical and for hospital...

Showing 1 to 12 of 16 entries