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Dive into the research topics where Anne M. Anglim is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne M. Anglim.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1994

The use of high-efficiency particulate air-filter respirators to protect hospital workers from tuberculosis. A cost-effectiveness analysis.

Karim A. Adal; Anne M. Anglim; Palumbo Cl; Titus Mg; Coyner Bj; Barry M. Farr

BACKGROUND After outbreaks of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention proposed the use of respirators with high-efficiency particulate air filters (HEPA respirators) as part of isolation precautions against tuberculosis, along with a respiratory-protection program for health care workers that includes medical evaluation, training, and tests of the fit of the respirators. Each HEPA respirator costs between


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1996

Prevention of nosocomial influenza.

Karim A. Adal; R. H. Flowers; Anne M. Anglim; Frederick G. Hayden; Maureen G. Titus; Betty J. Coyner; Barry M. Farr

7.51 and


Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases | 1994

Nosocomial diarrhea due to Clostridium difficile

Anne M. Anglim; Barry M. Farr

9.08, about 10 times the cost of respirators currently used. METHODS We conducted a cost-effectiveness analysis using data from the University of Virginia Hospital on exposure to patients with tuberculosis and rates at which the purified-protein-derivative (PPD) skin test became positive in hospital workers. The costs of a respiratory-protection program were based on those of an existing program for workers dealing with hazardous substances. RESULTS During 1992, 11 patients with documented tuberculosis were admitted to our hospital. Eight of 3852 workers (0.2 percent) had PPD tests that became positive. Five of these conversions were believed to be due to the booster phenomenon; one followed unprotected exposure to a patient not yet in isolation; the other two occurred in workers who had never entered a tuberculosis isolation room. These data suggest that it will take more than one year for the use of HEPA respirators to prevent a single conversion of the PPD test. Assuming that one conversion is prevented per year, however, it would take 41 years at out hospital to prevent one case of occupationally acquired tuberculosis, at a cost of


American Journal of Infection Control | 1994

Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission rates in a sanatorium: implications for new preventive guidelines.

John A. Jernigan; Karim A. Adal; Anne M. Anglim; Karin E. Byers; Barry M. Farr

1.3 million to


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1995

An outbreak of needlestick injuries in hospital employees due to needles piercing infectious waste containers

Anne M. Anglim; June E. Collmer; T. Joel Loving; Kenneth A. Beltran; Betty J. Coyner; Karim A. Adal; Janine Jagger; Nikolas J. Sojka; Barry M. Farr

18.5 million. CONCLUSIONS Given the effectiveness of currently recommended measures to prevent nosocomial transmission of tuberculosis, the addition of HEPA respirators would offer negligible protective efficacy at great cost.


JAMA Internal Medicine | 1995

Preventing Pneumococcal Bacteremia in Patients at Risk: Results of a Matched Case-Control Study

Barry M. Farr; B. Lynn Johnston; David K. Cobb; Michael J. Fisch; Teresa P. Germanson; Karim A. Adal; Anne M. Anglim

OBJECTIVE To study compliance with preventive strategies at a university hospital during an outbreak of nosocomial influenza A during the winter of 1988, and the rates of vaccination of healthcare workers and of nosocomial influenza following changes in vaccine practices after the outbreak. DESIGN Retrospective review of employee health, hospital epidemiology, hospital computing; and clinical microbiology records. SETTING A university hospital. INTERVENTIONS Unvaccinated personnel with exposure within the previous 72 hours to an unisolated case of influenza were offered influenza vaccine and 14 days of amantadine hydrochloride prophylaxis. Personnel with exposure more than 72 hours before evaluation were offered vaccine. A mobile cart was introduced for vaccinating personnel after the 1988 outbreak. RESULTS An outbreak of influenza with 10 nosocomial cases occurred in 1988. Only 4% of exposed employees had been vaccinated previously and 23% of exposed, unvaccinated employees agreed to take vaccine, amantadine, or both. A mobile-cart vaccination program was instituted, and annual vaccination rates steadily increased from 26.3% in 1989 to 1990 to 38% in 1993 to 1994 (P < .0001). The relative frequency of documented cases of influenza in employees with symptoms of influenza decreased significantly during this period (P = .025), but nosocomial influenza rates among patients did not change significantly. CONCLUSION A mobile-cart influenza vaccination program was associated with a significant increase in compliance among healthcare workers, but a majority still remained unvaccinated. The rate of nosocomial influenza among patients was not reduced by the modest increase in the vaccination rate, but influenza rates remained acceptably low, perhaps due to respiratory isolation of patients and furlough of employees with influenza.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1998

Disinfection of hospital rooms contaminated with vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium

Karin E. Byers; Lisa J. Durbin; Barbara M. Simonton; Anne M. Anglim; Karim A. Adal; Barry M. Farr

This review covers new diagnostic methods such as polymerase chain reaction, which have been developed as potential alternatives to the cytotoxicity assay for Clostridium difficile. Molecular typing methods such as restriction endonuclease analysis have been increasingly used for investigation of outbreaks. An experimental rat model showed inhibition of toxin-A receptor binding by Saccharomyces boulardii.


JAMA Internal Medicine | 1997

Effect of a Vancomycin Restriction Policy on Ordering Practices During an Outbreak of Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus faecium

Anne M. Anglim; Beth Klym; Karin E. Byers; W. Michael Scheld; Barry M. Farr

BACKGROUND In 1990, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended substituting dust-mist particulate respirators for simple isolation masks in acid-fast bacillus isolation rooms, reasoning that air leaks around the simple masks could result in a higher rate of purified protein derivative skin-test conversion. In 1993, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention draft guideline proposed that high-efficiency particulate air filter respirators be used instead of dust-mist particulate respirators. Epidemiologic data were not available to assess the importance of these changes or their cost-effectiveness. METHODS The University of Virginia was affiliated with a tuberculosis hospital from 1979 until 1987. We surveyed physicians who had served as residents in internal medicine during this period regarding purified protein derivative skin-test history. duration of work at the tuberculosis sanatorium, and any history of unprotected exposures to patients with active pulmonary or laryngeal tuberculosis. Patients with active tuberculosis at the sanatorium were isolated in negative-pressure rooms with UV lights. Physicians wore simple isolation masks in these rooms. RESULTS Responses were received from 83 former resident physicians. Fifty-two physicians had worked on the tuberculosis wards for a total of 420 weeks, with no subsequent skin-test conversions (95% CI 0 to 1 conversion/8 physician-years). CONCLUSIONS These data document a low risk of occupational transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to physicians who wear simple isolation masks in negative-pressure ventilation rooms with UV lights. This low rate predicts that the additional protective efficacy and cost-effectiveness of the more expensive high-efficiency particulate air filter respirators and the respiratory protection program will be low.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1994

HEPA respirators and tuberculosis in hospital workers.

Eitan Sobel; Robert J. Sherertz; Stephen A. Streed; Vickie Brown; Carolyn Bishop; William A. Rutala; David J. Weber; Karim A. Adal; Anne M. Anglim; Barry M. Farr

OBJECTIVES To investigate the cause of an outbreak of needlestick injuries (NSIs) in hospital employees. SETTING A 700-bed university hospital. DESIGN Outbreak investigation, laboratory evaluation of a medical waste disposal device, cost analysis. METHODS Employee health department records were reviewed of workers suffering sticks from needles piercing fiberboard-contaminated material containers (CMCs). A laboratory evaluation of needle-puncture resistance properties of the CMCs was performed using a testing apparatus. The cost of a hospital waste disposal program using fiberboard CMCs was compared with the cost of a program using rigid plastic (polypropylene) boxes. RESULTS During 40 months of surveillance in 1986 and from 1989 to 1991, only one NSI had occurred from a needle piercing a CMC. During 9 months in 1993, 13 NSIs occurred due to needles piercing CMCs (P < .001). No clinical illness resulted from the NSIs. The outbreak was halted by a temporary change to plastic (polypropylene) boxes for sharps disposal (


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1994

Disagreement over CDC Draft Guideline

Karim A. Adal; Anne M. Anglim; Yardena Siegman-Igra; Barry M. Farr; Jack M. Gwaltney; W. Michael Scheld

4.92 to

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Barry M. Farr

University of Virginia Health System

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Karin E. Byers

University of Virginia Health System

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Barbara M. Simonton

University of Virginia Health System

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David J. Weber

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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