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Dive into the research topics where Alison D. Lydecker is active.

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Featured researches published by Alison D. Lydecker.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012

Lower Antibody Levels to Staphylococcus aureus Exotoxins Are Associated With Sepsis in Hospitalized Adults With Invasive S. aureus Infections

Rajan P. Adhikari; Adebola O. Ajao; M. Javad Aman; Hatice Karauzum; Jawad Sarwar; Alison D. Lydecker; J. Kristie Johnson; Chinh Nguyen; Wilbur H. Chen; Mary-Claire Roghmann

BACKGROUND Staphylococcus aureus has numerous virulence factors, including exotoxins that may increase the severity of infection. This study was aimed at assessing whether preexisting antibodies to S. aureus toxins are associated with a lower risk of sepsis in adults with S. aureus infection complicated by bacteremia. METHODS We prospectively identified adults with S. aureus infection from 4 hospitals in Baltimore, MD, in 2009–2011. We obtained serum samples from prior to or at presentation of S. aureus bacteremia to measure total immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgG antibody levels to 11 S. aureus exotoxins. Bacterial isolates were tested for the genes encoding S. aureus exotoxins using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). RESULTS One hundred eligible subjects were included and 27 of them developed sepsis. When adjusted for total IgG levels and stratified for the presence of toxin in the infecting isolate as appropriate, the risk of sepsis was significantly lower in those patients with higher levels of IgG against α-hemolysin (Hla), δ-hemolysin (Hld), Panton Valentine leukocidin (PVL), staphylococcal enterotoxin C-1 (SEC-1), and phenol-soluble modulin α3 (PSM-α3). CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that higher antibody levels against Hla, Hld, PVL, SEC-1, and PSM-α3 may protect against sepsis in patients with invasive S. aureus infections.


Vaccine | 2011

Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine uptake and completion at an urban hospital

Nicholas Schluterman; Mishka Terplan; Alison D. Lydecker; J. Kathleen Tracy

BACKGROUND Despite the benefit of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine in preventing cervical cancer, fewer than half of eligible young women in the United States have initiated the three-vaccine series. Among those who initiate HPV vaccination, large proportions do not complete the three-dose regimen. PURPOSE To evaluate racial and health insurance-related disparities in HPV vaccination. METHODS We analyzed outpatient claims data for 8069 patients, ages 9-26 years, who had gynecologic visits at the University of Maryland Medical Center outpatient clinic from August 2006 to January 2010. RESULTS Thirty-five percent of our sample initiated the vaccine series, including 91% of those ages 9-13. Only 11% of the sample and 33% of the 9-13 age group completed the 3 dose series. A higher proportion of blacks than whites (38% vs. 32%; p<0.01) initiated, and 11% and 12%, respectively, of each race completed. Lower age was strongly correlated with uptake. After adjustment for insurance, blacks were less than half as likely as whites to complete the series in all age groups, and had 0.35 the odds (95% CI 0.26-0.46) of adherence. The uninsured had much lower race-adjusted odds than insured groups for initiation, but had similar adherence rates. Publicly insured individuals were more likely than the privately insured to complete all 3 doses. CONCLUSIONS Of the population of gynecologic service seekers seen at our university-based outpatient practice clinics, a significant minority initiate but do not complete the HPV vaccine series. More blacks than whites initiate the series, but similar proportions of the two races complete. Lack of insurance appears to be a major barrier to initiation, despite free vaccination programs.


Journal of Womens Health | 2010

Barriers to Cervical Cancer Screening Among Lesbians

J. Kathleen Tracy; Alison D. Lydecker; Lynda Ireland

OBJECTIVE To evaluate cervical cancer screening practices and barriers to screening in a sample of lesbians. METHODS Cross-sectional survey data were collected from 225 self-identified lesbians who completed an online questionnaire. RESULTS Of the respondents, 71% reported receiving a Pap screening test in the past 24 months (routine screeners), and 29% reported receiving a Pap screening test >24 months ago or never (nonroutine screeners). Routine screeners were more likely to be older (p < 0.01), white (p = 0.04), and college graduates (p < 0.01) than nonroutine screeners. Nonroutine screeners were more likely to delay seeking healthcare because of fear of discrimination (p < 0.01) and were less likely than routine screeners to disclose orientation to their primary care physician (p < 0.01). After adjusting for age, race, and education, nonroutine screeners perceived fewer benefits from (p < 0.01) and more barriers (p < 0.01) to Pap screening tests and were less knowledgeable about screening guidelines (p < 0.01) than routine screeners, but there was no difference in perceived susceptibility (p = 0.68), perceived seriousness (p = 0.68), or risk factor knowledge (p = 0.35) of cervical cancer. CONCLUSIONS Many lesbians do not screen for cervical cancer at recommended rates. Nonroutine screeners perceive fewer benefits, more barriers, and more discrimination and are less knowledgeable about screening guidelines than routine screeners.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2015

Transmission of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) to Healthcare Worker Gowns and Gloves During Care of Nursing Home Residents.

Mary-Claire Roghmann; J. Kristie Johnson; John D. Sorkin; Patricia Langenberg; Alison D. Lydecker; Brian Sorace; Lauren Levy; Lona Mody

OBJECTIVE To estimate the frequency of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) transmission to gowns and gloves worn by healthcare workers (HCWs) interacting with nursing home residents to better inform infection prevention policies in this setting DESIGN Observational study SETTING Participants were recruited from 13 community-based nursing homes in Maryland and Michigan PARTICIPANTS Residents and HCWs from these nursing homes METHODS Residents were cultured for MRSA at the anterior nares and perianal or perineal skin. HCWs wore gowns and gloves during usual care activities. At the end of each activity, a research coordinator swabbed the HCWs gown and gloves. RESULTS A total of 403 residents were enrolled; 113 were MRSA colonized. Glove contamination was higher than gown contamination (24% vs 14% of 954 interactions; P1.0; P<.05). We also identified low-risk care activities: giving medications and performing glucose monitoring (OR<1.0; P<.05). Residents with chronic skin breakdown had significantly higher rates of gown and glove contamination. CONCLUSIONS MRSA transmission from MRSA-positive residents to HCW gown and gloves is substantial; high-contact activities of daily living confer the highest risk. These activities do not involve overt contact with body fluids, skin breakdown, or mucous membranes, which suggests the need to modify current standards of care involving the use of gowns and gloves in the nursing home setting.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2012

Does sleep deprivation impair orthopaedic surgeons' cognitive and psychomotor performance?

Michael O’Brien; Robert V. O’Toole; Mary Zadnik Newell; Alison D. Lydecker; Jason W. Nascone; Marcus Sciadini; Andrew Pollak; Clifford H. Turen; W. Andrew Eglseder

BACKGROUND Sleep deprivation may slow reaction time, cloud judgment, and impair the ability to think. Our purpose was to study the cognitive and psychomotor performances of orthopaedic trauma surgeons on the basis of the amount of sleep that they obtained. METHODS We prospectively studied the performances of thirty-two orthopaedic trauma surgeons (residents, fellows, and attending surgeons) over two four-week periods at an urban academic trauma center. Testing sessions used handheld computers to administer validated cognitive and psychomotor function tests. We conducted a multivariate analysis to examine the independent association between test performance and multiple covariates, including the amount of sleep the night before testing. RESULTS Our analysis demonstrated that orthopaedic surgeons who had slept four hours or less the night before the test had 1.43 times the odds (95% confidence interval, 1.04 to 1.95; p = 0.03) of committing at least one error on an individual test compared with orthopaedic surgeons who had slept more than four hours the previous night. The Running Memory test, which assesses sustained attention, concentration, and working memory, was most sensitive to deterioration in performance in participants who had had four hours of sleep or less; when controlling for other covariates, the test demonstrated a 72% increase in the odds of making at least one error (odds ratio, 1.72 [95% confidence interval, 1.02 to 2.90]; p = 0.04). No significant decrease in performance with sleep deprivation was shown with the other three tests. CONCLUSIONS Orthopaedic trauma surgeons showed deterioration in performance on a validated cognitive task when they had slept four hours or less the previous night. It is unknown how performance on this test relates to surgical performance.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Persistent Staphylococcus aureus colonization is not a strongly heritable trait in Amish families.

Mary-Claire Roghmann; J. Kristie Johnson; O. Colin Stine; Alison D. Lydecker; Kathleen A. Ryan; Braxton D. Mitchell; Alan R. Shuldiner

About 20% of adults are persistently colonized with S. aureus in the anterior nares. Host genetic factors could contribute susceptibility to this phenotype. The objective of this study was to determine whether the phenotype of persistent S. aureus colonization aggregates in family members who live in different households. Healthy adults and their eligible same sex siblings who lived in different households were recruited from the Old Order Amish of Lancaster, Pennsylvania. All participants had two cultures of the anterior nares to determine if they were persistently colonized with S. aureus. Three hundred and ninety eight participants finished the study, of whom 166 were index cases and 232 were siblings of index cases. Eighteen per cent (71/398) of all participants and 17% (29/166) of index cases were persistently colonized with S. aureus. Twenty two per cent (8/36) of siblings of persistently colonized index cases were persistently colonized with S. aureus compared to 17% (34/196) of siblings of non-persistently colonized index cases, yielding a prevalence rate ratio of 1.28 (95% CI: 0.65–2.54, p = 0.64) and sibling relative risk of 1.25 (95% CI: 0.65–2.38, p = 0.51). The heritability of persistent colonization was 0.19±0.21 (p = 0.31). Persistent S. aureus colonization does not strongly aggregate in Amish family members in different households and heritability is low, suggesting that environmental factors or acquired host factors are more important than host genetic factors in determining persistent S. aureus colonization in this community.


mSphere | 2017

Comparison of the Microbiota of Older Adults Living in Nursing Homes and the Community

Mary-Claire Roghmann; Alison D. Lydecker; Lauren E. Hittle; Robert T. DeBoy; Rebecca G. Nowak; J. Kristie Johnson; Emmanuel F. Mongodin

The nose, throat, and skin over the subclavian and femoral veins are the body sites which harbor the bacteria which most commonly cause health care-associated infection. We assessed the effect of nursing home residence on the microbiota of these body sites in older adults. We found that the microbiota composition of the different body sites was similar between nursing home and community participants, but we identified differences in relative abundance levels. We found remarkable similarities in the bacterial communities of different body sites in older adults who lived in nursing homes compared to those in the community among people who had not been on antibiotics for the past 3 months. We also found that the femoral skin microbiota had evidence of stool contamination in the nursing home residents, providing a rationale for improved skin hygiene. Taken together, it appears that the health care environment does not alter the microbiota to the extent that antibiotics do. ABSTRACT Our objective for this study was to characterize the microbial communities of the anterior nares (nose), posterior pharynx (throat), and skin of the femoral and subclavian areas in older adults from nursing homes and the community. Older adults (≥65 years) without antibiotic use for the past 3 months were recruited from nursing homes (NH; n = 16) and from the community (CB; n = 51). Specimens were taken from nose, throat, and skin sites for culture and bacterial profiling using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. We found that pathogenic Gram-negative rod (GNR) colonization on the femoral skin was higher in NH participants than CB participants; otherwise, there were no differences in GNR colonization at other body sites or in Staphylococcus aureus colonization at any body site. Bacterial community profiling demonstrated that the operational taxonomic unit compositions of the different body sites were similar between NH and CB participants, but the analysis identified differences in relative abundance levels. Streptococcus spp. were more abundant and Prevotella spp. were less abundant in the throats of NH participants than in throats of CB participants. Proteus, Escherichia coli, and Enterococcus were more abundant in NH participants on the femoral skin. We found a pattern of decreased abundance of specific Proteobacteria in NH participants at the anterior nares and at both skin sites. We concluded that bacterial communities were largely similar in diversity and composition within body sites between older adults without recent antibiotic use from NH compared to those from the community. Our findings support the rationale for improved hygiene in NH residents to reduce the transmission risk of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, such as Enterococcus spp. or Enterobacteriaceae. IMPORTANCE The nose, throat, and skin over the subclavian and femoral veins are the body sites which harbor the bacteria which most commonly cause health care-associated infection. We assessed the effect of nursing home residence on the microbiota of these body sites in older adults. We found that the microbiota composition of the different body sites was similar between nursing home and community participants, but we identified differences in relative abundance levels. We found remarkable similarities in the bacterial communities of different body sites in older adults who lived in nursing homes compared to those in the community among people who had not been on antibiotics for the past 3 months. We also found that the femoral skin microbiota had evidence of stool contamination in the nursing home residents, providing a rationale for improved skin hygiene. Taken together, it appears that the health care environment does not alter the microbiota to the extent that antibiotics do.


American Journal of Infection Control | 2017

Transmission of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus to health care worker gowns and gloves during care of residents in Veterans Affairs nursing homes

Lisa Pineles; Daniel J. Morgan; Alison D. Lydecker; J. Kristie Johnson; John D. Sorkin; Patricia Langenberg; Natalia Blanco; Alan J. Lesse; John A. Sellick; Kalpana Gupta; Luci K. Leykum; Jose Cadena; Nickie Lepcha; Mary Claire Roghmann

Background: This was an observational study designed to estimate the frequency of methicillin‐resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) transmission to gowns and gloves worn by health care workers (HCWs) interacting with Veterans Affairs Community Living Center (VA nursing home) residents to inform MRSA prevention policies. Methods: Participants included residents and HCWs from 7 VA nursing homes in 4 states and Washington, DC. Residents were cultured for MRSA at the anterior nares, perianal skin, and wound (if present). HCWs wore gowns and gloves during usual care activities. After each activity, a research coordinator swabbed the HCWs gown and gloves. Swabs were cultured for MRSA. Results: There were 200 residents enrolled; 94 (46%) were MRSA colonized. Glove contamination was higher than gown contamination (20% vs 11%, respectively; P < .01). Transmission varied greatly by type of care from 0%‐19% for gowns and 7%‐37% for gloves. High‐risk care activities (odds ratio [OR] > 1.0, P < .05) for gown contamination included changing dressings (eg, wound), dressing, providing hygiene (eg, brushing teeth), and bathing. Low‐risk care activities (OR < 1.0, P < .05 or no transmission) for gown contamination included glucose monitoring, giving medications, and feeding. Conclusions: MRSA transmission from colonized residents to gloves was higher than transmission to gowns. Transmission to gloves varies by type of care, but all care had a risk of contamination, demonstrating the importance of hand hygiene after all care. Transmission to gowns was significantly higher with certain types of care. Optimizing gown and glove use by targeting high‐risk care activities could improve resident‐centered care for MRSA‐colonized residents by promoting a home‐like environment.


Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2017

Microbiological effect of mupirocin and chlorhexidine for Staphylococcus aureus decolonization in community and nursing home based adults

Mary-Claire Roghmann; Alison D. Lydecker; Patricia Langenberg; Emmanuel F. Mongodin; J. Kristie Johnson

OBJECTIVE To compare the presence of Staphylococcus aureus and pathogenic Gram-negative rods (GNR) in the anterior nares, posterior pharynx and three skin sites in community-based adults and nursing home-based adults before and after treatment with nasal mupirocin and topical chlorhexidine. METHODS S. aureus-colonized adults were recruited from the community (n=26) and from nursing homes (n=8). Eligible participants were cultured for S. aureus and GNR during two study visits and then received intranasal mupirocin and topical chlorhexidine for 5days, with a 2-month follow-up period. RESULTS After decolonization, we found sustained decreases of S. aureus colonization in nose, throat and skin sites over 4-8weeks in both populations. Intranasal mupirocin did not increase GNR colonization in nose or throat. Chlorhexidine did not decrease GNR colonization in skin sites. CONCLUSIONS Decolonization with mupirocin and chlorhexidine leads to a sustained effect on S. aureus colonization without affecting GNR colonization.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2017

Transmission of resistant Gram-negative bacteria to health care worker gowns and gloves during care of nursing home residents in Veterans Affairs community living centers

Natalia Blanco; Lisa Pineles; Alison D. Lydecker; J. Kristie Johnson; John D. Sorkin; Daniel J. Morgan; Mary Claire Roghmann; Alan J. Lesse; John A. Sellick; Kalpana Gupta; Luci K. Leykum; Jose Cadena; Nickie Lepcha; Va Gown; Glove Investigators; Cdc Prevention Epicenters Program

ABSTRACT The objectives of the study were to estimate the risk of transmission of antibiotic-resistant Gram-negative bacteria (RGNB) to gowns and gloves (G&G) worn by health care workers (HCWs) when providing care to nursing home residents and to identify the types of care and resident characteristics associated with transmission. A multicenter, prospective observational study was conducted with residents and HCWs from Veterans Affairs (VA) nursing homes. Perianal swabs to detect RGNB were collected from residents. HCWs wore G&G during usual care activities, and the G&G were swabbed at the end of the interaction in a standardized manner. Transmission of RGNB from a colonized resident to G&G by type of care was measured. Odds ratios (ORs) associated with type of care or resident characteristics were estimated. Fifty-seven (31%) of 185 enrolled residents were colonized with ≥1 RGNB. RGNB transmission to HCW gloves or gowns occurred during 9% of the interactions (n = 905): 7% to only gloves and 2% to only gowns. Bathing the resident and providing hygiene and toilet assistance were associated with a high risk of transmission. Glucose monitoring and assistance with feeding or medication were associated with a low risk of transmission. In addition, antibiotic use by the resident was strongly associated with greater transmission (OR, 2.51; P < 0.01). RGNB were transferred to HCWs during ∼9% of visits. High-risk types of care were identified for which use of G&G may be prioritized. Antibiotic use was associated with 2.5 times greater risk of transmission, emphasizing the importance of antibiotic stewardship. (This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under registration no. NCT01350479.)

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Alan J. Lesse

State University of New York System

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Daniel J. Morgan

Pennsylvania State University

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