Vancomycin MICs (V-MIC) and the frequency of heteroresistant vancomycin-intermediateisolates with V-MICs of <1, 1.5, 2, and 3 g/ml, respectively (P < 0.001). The V-MIC distribution and the hVISA frequency were stable over the 11-year period. Most patients (89.0%) received vancomycin. The mortality rate (evaluated with 285 patients for whose isolates the trough V-MIC was >10 g/ml) was comparable for patients whose isolates had V-MICs of <1 and 1.5 g/ml (19.4% and 27.0%, respectively; P ؍ 0.2) but higher for patients whose isolates had V-MICs of >2 g/ml (47.6%; P ؍ 0.03). However, the impact of V-MIC and hVISA status on mortality or persistent (>7 days) bacteremia was not substantiated by multivariate analysis. Staphylococcal chromosome cassette mec (SCCmec) typing of 261 isolates (including all hVISA isolates) revealed that 93.0% of the hVISA isolates were SCCmec type II. These findings demonstrate that the V-MIC distribution and hVISA frequencies were stable over an 11-year span. A V-MIC of >2 g/ml was associated with a higher rate of mortality by univariate analysis, but the relevance of the V-MIC and the presence of hVISA remain uncertain. A multicenter prospective randomized study by the use of standardized methods is needed to evaluate the relevance of hVISA and determine the optimal treatment of patients whose isolates have V-MICs of >2.0 g/ml.
No adverse outcome was documented with hVISA phenotype, whereas VISA contributed to vancomycin treatment failure. VISA and hVISA appear to emerge in SCCmec II isolates among vancomycin-exposed patients and are better detected by Etest.
Objectives: Avoiding placement of unnecessary urinary catheters (UCs) in the emergency department (ED) affects UC utilization during hospitalization. The authors sought to evaluate the effect of establishing institutional guidelines for appropriate UC placement coupled with emergency physician (EP) education on UC utilization.Methods: Urinary catheter utilization was measured before and after the establishment of guidelines and EP education. Data collected included the presence of a UC on ED arrival, placement of a UC in the ED, documentation of a physician order for UC placement, reasons for placement, and compliance with the guidelines. Chi-square analyses were used to study the association between pre-and postintervention time periods and catheter use.Results: A total of 377 (15%) patients had UCs; only 151 (47%) UCs initially placed in the ED had a physician order documented. UC placement was appropriately indicated in 75.5% of patients with a documented physician order, but in only 52% of cases without a documented physician order (p < 0.001). The physician intervention was associated with an overall reduction in UC utilization from 16.4% to 13% (p = 0.018). Physicians ordered 40% fewer UCs postintervention compared to preintervention. Preintervention, a physician order for UC placement was found indicated in 72.6% patients, compared to 82.2% patients with UC placed postintervention (p = 0.21).Conclusions: Establishing guidelines for UC placement and physician education in the ED were associated with a marked reduction in utilization. However, addressing appropriate UC utilization may require evaluating other factors such as nursing influence on utilization.ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2010; 17:337-340 ª
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