Deron C. Burton
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Featured researches published by Deron C. Burton.
JAMA | 2009
Deron C. Burton; Jonathan R. Edwards; Teresa C. Horan; John A. Jernigan; Scott K. Fridkin
CONTEXT Concerns about rates of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) health care-associated infections have prompted calls for mandatory screening or reporting in efforts to reduce MRSA infections. OBJECTIVE To examine trends in the incidence of MRSA central line-associated bloodstream infections (BSIs) in US intensive care units (ICUs). DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Data reported by hospitals to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) from 1997-2007 were used to calculate pooled mean annual central line-associated BSI incidence rates for 7 types of adult and non-neonatal pediatric ICUs. Percent MRSA was defined as the proportion of S aureus central line-associated BSIs that were MRSA. We used regression modeling to estimate percent changes in central line-associated BSI metrics over the analysis period. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Incidence rate of central line-associated BSIs per 1000 central line days; percent MRSA among S. aureus central line-associated BSIs. RESULTS Overall, 33,587 central line-associated BSIs were reported from 1684 ICUs representing 16,225,498 patient-days of surveillance; 2498 reported central line-associated BSIs (7.4%) were MRSA and 1590 (4.7%) were methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA). Of evaluated ICU types, surgical, nonteaching-affiliated medical-surgical, cardiothoracic, and coronary units experienced increases in MRSA central line-associated BSI incidence in the 1997-2001 period; however, medical, teaching-affiliated medical-surgical, and pediatric units experienced no significant changes. From 2001 through 2007, MRSA central line-associated BSI incidence declined significantly in all ICU types except in pediatric units, for which incidence rates remained static. Declines in MRSA central line-associated BSI incidence ranged from -51.5% (95% CI, -33.7% to -64.6%; P < .001) in nonteaching-affiliated medical-surgical ICUs (0.31 vs 0.15 per 1000 central line days) to -69.2% (95% CI, -57.9% to -77.7%; P < .001) in surgical ICUs (0.58 vs 0.18 per 1000 central line days). In all ICU types, MSSA central line-associated BSI incidence declined from 1997 through 2007, with changes in incidence ranging from -60.1% (95% CI, -41.2% to -73.1%; P < .001) in surgical ICUs (0.24 vs 0.10 per 1000 central line days) to -77.7% (95% CI, -68.2% to -84.4%; P < .001) in medical ICUs (0.40 vs 0.09 per 1000 central line days). Although the overall proportion of S. aureus central line-associated BSIs due to MRSA increased 25.8% (P = .02) in the 1997-2007 period, overall MRSA central line-associated BSI incidence decreased 49.6% (P < .001) over this period. CONCLUSIONS The incidence of MRSA central line-associated BSI has been decreasing in recent years in most ICU types reporting to the CDC. These trends are not apparent when only percent MRSA is monitored.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2009
Jacqueline E. Tate; Richard Rheingans; Ciara E. O’Reilly; Benson Obonyo; Deron C. Burton; Jeffrey A. Tornheim; Kubaje Adazu; Peter Jaron; Benjamin Ochieng; Tara Kerin; Lisa Calhoun; Mary J. Hamel; Kayla F. Laserson; Robert F. Breiman; Daniel R. Feikin; Eric D. Mintz; Marc-Alain Widdowson
BACKGROUND The projected impact and cost-effectiveness of rotavirus vaccination are important for supporting rotavirus vaccine introduction in Africa, where limited health intervention funds are available. METHODS Hospital records, health utilization surveys, verbal autopsy data, and surveillance data on diarrheal disease were used to determine rotavirus-specific rates of hospitalization, clinic visits, and deaths due to diarrhea among children <5 years of age in Nyanza Province, Kenya. Rates were extrapolated nationally with use of province-specific data on diarrheal illness. Direct medical costs were estimated using record review and World Health Organization estimates. Household costs were collected through parental interviews. The impact of vaccination on health burden and on the cost-effectiveness per disability-adjusted life-year and lives saved were calculated. RESULTS Annually in Kenya, rotavirus infection causes 19% of hospitalizations and 16% of clinic visits for diarrhea among children <5 years of age and causes 4471 deaths, 8781 hospitalizations, and 1,443,883 clinic visits. Nationally, rotavirus disease costs the health care system
PLOS ONE | 2012
Collins W. Tabu; Robert F. Breiman; Benjamin Ochieng; Barrack Aura; Leonard Cosmas; Allan Audi; Beatrice Olack; Godfrey Bigogo; Juliette R. Ongus; Patricia I. Fields; Eric D. Mintz; Deron C. Burton; Joe Oundo; Daniel R. Feikin
10.8 million annually. Routine vaccination with a 2-dose rotavirus vaccination series would avert 2467 deaths (55%), 5724 hospitalizations (65%), and 852,589 clinic visits (59%) and would save 58 disability-adjusted life-years per 1000 children annually. At
Health Affairs | 2011
Bobby Milstein; Jack Homer; Peter A. Briss; Deron C. Burton; Terry F. Pechacek
3 per series, a program would cost
American Journal of Public Health | 2010
Deron C. Burton; Brendan Flannery; Nancy M. Bennett; Monica M. Farley; Ken Gershman; Lee H. Harrison; Ruth Lynfield; Susan Petit; Arthur Reingold; William Schaffner; Ann Thomas; Brian D. Plikaytis; Charles E. Rose; Cynthia G. Whitney; Anne Schuchat
2.1 million in medical costs annually; the break-even price is
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2011
Deron C. Burton; Jonathan R. Edwards; Arjun Srinivasan; Scott K. Fridkin; Carolyn V. Gould
2.07 per series. CONCLUSIONS A rotavirus vaccination program would reduce the substantial burden of rotavirus disease and the economic burden in Kenya.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013
Amber K. Haynes; Arie Manangan; Marika K. Iwane; Katharine Sturm-Ramirez; Nusrat Homaira; W. Abdullah Brooks; Stephen P. Luby; Mahmudur Rahman; John D. Klena; Yuzhi Zhang; Hongie Yu; Faxian Zhan; Erica Dueger; Adel Mansour; Nahed Azazzy; John McCracken; Joe P. Bryan; Maria Renee Lopez; Deron C. Burton; Godfrey Bigogo; Robert F. Breiman; Daniel R. Feikin; Kariuki Njenga; Joel M. Montgomery; Adam L. Cohen; Jocelyn Moyes; Marthi Pretorius; Cheryl Cohen; Marietjie Venter; Malinee Chittaganpitch
Background The epidemiology of non-Typhi Salmonella (NTS) bacteremia in Africa will likely evolve as potential co-factors, such as HIV, malaria, and urbanization, also change. Methods As part of population-based surveillance among 55,000 persons in malaria-endemic, rural and malaria-nonendemic, urban Kenya from 2006–2009, blood cultures were obtained from patients presenting to referral clinics with fever ≥38.0°C or severe acute respiratory infection. Incidence rates were adjusted based on persons with compatible illnesses, but whose blood was not cultured. Results NTS accounted for 60/155 (39%) of blood culture isolates in the rural and 7/230 (3%) in the urban sites. The adjusted incidence in the rural site was 568/100,000 person-years, and the urban site was 51/100,000 person-years. In both sites, the incidence was highest in children <5 years old. The NTS-to-typhoid bacteremia ratio in the rural site was 4.6 and in the urban site was 0.05. S. Typhimurium represented >85% of blood NTS isolates in both sites, but only 21% (urban) and 64% (rural) of stool NTS isolates. Overall, 76% of S. Typhimurium blood isolates were multi-drug resistant, most of which had an identical profile in Pulse Field Gel Electrophoresis. In the rural site, the incidence of NTS bacteremia increased during the study period, concomitant with rising malaria prevalence (monthly correlation of malaria positive blood smears and NTS bacteremia cases, Spearmans correlation, p = 0.018 for children, p = 0.16 adults). In the rural site, 80% of adults with NTS bacteremia were HIV-infected. Six of 7 deaths within 90 days of NTS bacteremia had HIV/AIDS as the primary cause of death assigned on verbal autopsy. Conclusions NTS caused the majority of bacteremias in rural Kenya, but typhoid predominated in urban Kenya, which most likely reflects differences in malaria endemicity. Control measures for malaria, as well as HIV, will likely decrease the burden of NTS bacteremia in Africa.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013
Godfrey Bigogo; Robert F. Breiman; Daniel R. Feikin; Allan Audi; Barrack Aura; Leonard Cosmas; M. Kariuki Njenga; Barry S. Fields; Victor Omballa; Henry Njuguna; Peter M. Ochieng; Daniel Ondari Mogeni; George Aol; Beatrice Olack; Mark A. Katz; Joel M. Montgomery; Deron C. Burton
We used a dynamic simulation model of the US health system to test three proposed strategies to reduce deaths and improve the cost-effectiveness of interventions: expanding health insurance coverage, delivering better preventive and chronic care, and protecting health by enabling healthier behavior and improving environmental conditions. We found that each alone could save lives and provide good economic value, but they are likely to be more effective in combination. Although coverage and care save lives quickly, they tend to increase costs. The impact of protection grows more gradually, but it is a critical ingredient over time for lowering both the number of deaths and reducing costs. Only protection slows the growth in the prevalence of disease and injury and thereby alleviates rather than exacerbates demand on limited primary care capacity. When added to a simulated scenario with coverage and care, protection could save 90 percent more lives and reduce costs by 30 percent in year 10; by year 25, that same investment in protection could save about 140 percent more lives and reduce costs by 62 percent.
Epidemiology and Infection | 2013
E. L. Murray; Sammy Khagayi; M. Ope; Godfrey Bigogo; R. Ochola; P. Muthoka; K. Njenga; Frank Odhiambo; Deron C. Burton; Kayla F. Laserson; Robert F. Breiman; Daniel R. Feikin; Mark A. Katz
OBJECTIVES We examined associations between the socioeconomic characteristics of census tracts and racial/ethnic disparities in the incidence of bacteremic community-acquired pneumonia among US adults. METHODS We analyzed data on 4870 adults aged 18 years or older with community-acquired bacteremic pneumonia identified through active, population-based surveillance in 9 states and geocoded to census tract of residence. We used data from the 2000 US Census to calculate incidence by age, race/ethnicity, and census tract characteristics and Poisson regression to estimate rate ratios (RRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). RESULTS During 2003 to 2004, the average annual incidence of bacteremic pneumonia was 24.2 episodes per 100 000 Black adults versus 10.1 per 100 000 White adults (RR = 2.40; 95% CI = 2.24, 2.57). Incidence among Black residents of census tracts with 20% or more of persons in poverty (most impoverished) was 4.4 times the incidence among White residents of census tracts with less than 5% of persons in poverty (least impoverished). Racial disparities in incidence were reduced but remained significant in models that controlled for age, census tract poverty level, and state. CONCLUSIONS Adults living in impoverished census tracts are at increased risk of bacteremic pneumonia and should be targeted for prevention efforts.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012
Mark G. Thompson; Robert F. Breiman; Mary J. Hamel; Meghna Desai; Gideon O. Emukule; Sammy Khagayi; David K. Shay; Kathleen Morales; Simon Kariuki; Godfrey Bigogo; M. Kariuki Njenga; Deron C. Burton; Frank Odhiambo; Daniel R. Feikin; Kayla F. Laserson; Mark A. Katz
BACKGROUND Over the past 2 decades, multiple interventions have been developed to prevent catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs). The CAUTI prevention guidelines of the Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee were recently revised. OBJECTIVE To examine changes in rates of CAUTI events in adult intensive care units (ICUs) in the United States from 1990 through 2007. METHODS Data were reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) through the National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance System from 1990 through 2004 and the National Healthcare Safety Network from 2006 through 2007. Infection preventionists in participating hospitals used standard methods to identify all CAUTI events (categorized as symptomatic urinary tract infection [SUTI] or asymptomatic bacteriuria [ASB]) and urinary catheter-days (UC-days) in months selected for surveillance. Data from all facilities were aggregated to calculate pooled mean annual SUTI and ASB rates (in events per 1,000 UC-days) by ICU type. Poisson regression was used to estimate percent changes in rates over time. RESULTS Overall, 36,282 SUTIs and 22,973 ASB episodes were reported from 367 facilities representing 1,223 adult ICUs, including combined medical/surgical (505), medical (212), surgical (224), coronary (173), and cardiothoracic (109) ICUs. All ICU types experienced significant declines of 19%-67% in SUTI rates and 29%-72% in ASB rates from 1990 through 2007. Between 2000 and 2007, significant reductions in SUTI rates occurred in all ICU types except cardiothoracic ICUs. CONCLUSIONS Since 1990, CAUTI rates have declined significantly in all major adult ICU types in facilities reporting to the CDC. Further efforts are needed to assess prevention strategies that might have led to these decreases and to implement new CAUTI prevention guidelines.