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Dive into the research topics where Stephen Parenteau is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen Parenteau.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2002

Antimicrobial activity of a novel catheter lock solution

Chirag B. Shah; Marc W. Mittelman; J. W. Costerton; Stephen Parenteau; Michael Pelak; Richard Arsenault; Leonard A. Mermel

ABSTRACT Intravascular catheter-associated bloodstream infections significantly increase rates of morbidity and hospital costs. Microbial colonization and development of biofilms, which are known to be recalcitrant to antibiotic therapy, often lead to the loss of otherwise patent vascular access systems. We evaluated a new taurolidine- and citrate-based catheter lock solution (Neutrolin; Biolink Corporation, Norwell, Mass.) for its activity against planktonic microbes, antimicrobial activity in a catheter model, and biofilm eradication activity. In studies of planktonic microbes, after 24 h of contact, 675 mg of taurolidine-citrate solution per liter caused >99% reductions in the initial counts of Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Entercoccus faecalis. A solution of 13,500 mg/liter was cidal for Candida albicans. Ports and attached catheters inoculated with 50 to 600 CFU of these bloodstream isolates per ml were locked with heparin or the taurolidine-citrate solution. After 72 h, there was no growth in the taurolidine-citrate-treated devices but the heparin-treated devices exhibited growth in the range of 6 × 102 to 5 × 106 CFU/ml. Biofilms were developed on silicone disks in modified Robbins devices with broth containing 6% serum (initial counts, 106 to 108 CFU/cm2). The axenic biofilms were treated for 24 h with taurolidine-citrate or heparin. Taurolidine-citrate exposure resulted in a median reduction of 4.8 logs, whereas heparin treatment resulted in a median reduction of 1.7 logs (P < 0.01). No significant differences in the effects of the two treatments against P. aeruginosa and C. albicans were observed. These findings suggest that taurolidine-citrate is a promising combination agent for the prevention and treatment of intravascular catheter-related infections.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2011

Impact of Chlorhexidine Bathing on Hospital-Acquired Infections among General Medical Patients

Steven Z. Kassakian; Leonard A. Mermel; Julie Jefferson; Stephen Parenteau; Jason T. Machan

BACKGROUND A paucity of data exists regarding the effectiveness of daily chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) bathing in non-intensive care unit (ICU) settings. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effectiveness of daily CHG bathing in a non-ICU setting to reduce methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant Enteroccocus (VRE) hospital-acquired infections (HAIs), compared with daily bathing with soap and water. DESIGN Quasi-experimental study design; the primary outcome was the composite incidence of MRSA and VRE HAIs. Clostridium difficile HAI incidence was measured as a nonequivalent dependent variable with which to assess potential confounders. SETTING Four general medicine units, with a total of 94 beds, at a 719-bed academic tertiary-care facility in Providence, Rhode Island. PATIENTS A total of 7,102 and 7,699 adult patients were admitted to the medical service in the control and intervention groups, respectively. Patients admitted from January 1 through December 31, 2008, were bathed daily with soap and water (control group), and those admitted from February 1, 2009, through March 31, 2010, were bathed daily with CHG-impregnated cloths (intervention group). RESULTS Daily bathing with CHG was associated with a 64% reduced risk of developing the primary outcome, namely, the composite incidence of MRSA and VRE HAIs (hazard ratio, 0.36 [95% CI, 0.2-0.8]; P = .01). There was no change in the incidence of C. difficile HAIs (P = .6). Colonization with MRSA was associated with an increased risk of developing a MRSA HAI (hazard ratio, 8 [95% CI, 3-19]; P < .001). CONCLUSION Daily CHG bathing was associated with a reduced HAI risk, using a composite endpoint of MRSA and VRE HAIs, in a general medical inpatient population.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Seasonality of MRSA Infections

Leonard A. Mermel; Jason T. Machan; Stephen Parenteau

Using MRSA isolates submitted to our hospital microbiology laboratory January 2001–March 2010 and the number of our emergency department (ED) visits, quarterly community-associated (CA) and hospital-associated (HA) MRSA infections were modeled using Poisson regressions. For pediatric patients, approximately 1.85x (95% CI 1.45x–2.36x, adj. p<0.0001) as many CA-MRSA infections per ED visit occurred in the second two quarters as occurred in the first two quarters. For adult patients, 1.14x (95% CI 1.01x–1.29x, adj.p = 0.03) as many infections per ED visit occurred in the second two quarters as in the first two quarters. Approximately 2.94x (95% CI 1.39x–6.21x, adj.p = 0.015) as many HA-MRSA infections per hospital admission occurred in the second two quarters as occurred in the first two quarters for pediatric patients. No seasonal variation was observed among adult HA-MRSA infections per hospital admission. We demonstrated seasonality of MRSA infections and provide a summary table of similar observations in other studies.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2003

Pseudomonas Surgical-Site Infections Linked to a Healthcare Worker With Onychomycosis

Leonard A. Mermel; Maria McKay; Jane Dempsey; Stephen Parenteau

OBJECTIVE To determine the etiology of Pseudomonas aeruginosa surgical-site infections following cardiac surgery. SETTING University teaching hospital. PATIENTS Those with wound cultures that grew P. aeruginosa after cardiac surgery performed from 1999 to 2001. METHODS Medical records and operating room (OR) records of patients with P. aeruginosa cardiac surgical-site infections from 1999 to 2001 were reviewed. Healthcare workers involved with two or more cases were interviewed and examined. Specimens for environmental cultures were obtained from the ORs and cardiac surgical equipment. Cardiac surgery cases were observed and postoperative care and the cleaning of surgical instruments were investigated. OR air handling system records during the epidemic period were reviewed. Molecular fingerprinting of available P. aeruginosa isolates from infected patients and a healthcare worker was done. RESULTS There were five P. aeruginosa cardiac surgical-site infections from January to August 2001, compared with no such infections from 1999 to 2000. All were adult patients. One cardiac surgeon with onychomycosis operated on all five cases. He did not routinely double glove. The involved fingernail grew P. aeruginosa. Three P. aeruginosa patient isolates were available for pulsed-field gel electrophoresis; two were identical to the isolate from the involved surgeons onychomycotic nail. No environmental OR cultures grew P. aeruginosa. The surgeons culture-positive nail was completely removed. There have been no P. aeruginosa surgical-site infections among cardiac surgery patients since this intervention. CONCLUSION At least two cases of a cluster of P. aeruginosa surgical-site infections resulted from colonization of a cardiac surgeons onychomycotic nail.


The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety | 2013

Reducing Clostridium difficile Incidence, Colectomies, and Mortality in the Hospital Setting: A Successful Multidisciplinary Approach

Leonard A. Mermel; Julie Jefferson; Kerry Blanchard; Stephen Parenteau; Benjamin Mathis; Kimberle C. Chapin; Jason T. Machan

BACKGROUND Health care associated Clostridium difficile infections are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in hospitals. In the United States, from 2000 through 2009, discharge diagnoses from hospitals in the United States that included C. difficile increased from 139,000 to 336,600, and the yearly national excess hospital cost associated with hospital-onset C. difficile is estimated to be upwards of


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1995

Association of legionnaires' disease with construction : contamination of potable water ?

Leonard A. Mermel; Stephen L. Josephson; Christina Giorgio; Jane Dempsey; Stephen Parenteau

1.3 billion. METHODS A hospitalwide, multidisciplinary approach was undertaken at Rhode Island Hospital (Providence), a tertiary care hospital. The hospital plan entailed six interventions: (1) develop a C. difficile hospital infection control plan based on a risk assessment; (2) monitor hospitalwide morbidity and mortality associated with C. difficile infection; (3) improve sensitivity of C. difficile toxin detection in stool specimens using a polymerase chain reaction-based nucleic acid amplification assay; (4) enhance environmental cleaning of patient rooms and equipment; (5) develop a C. difficile infection treatment plan; and (6) conduct other interventions. The incidence of health care-associated C. difficile infection was assessed from January 2006 through the third quarter of 2012; the number of colectomies and mortality associated with C. difficile infection were determined from January 2005 through the third quarter of 2012. RESULTS The incidence of health care-associated C. difficile infection decreased from a peak of 12.2/1,000 discharges during the second quarter of 2006 to 3.6/1,000 discharges during the third quarter of 2012. The yearly mortality in patients with health care-associated C. difficile infection was reduced from a peak of 52 in 2006 to 19 in 2011, with 13 such cases in the first three quarters of 2012. CONCLUSIONS A hospitalwide multidisciplinary approach can reduce health care-associated C. difficile infection morbidity and mortality.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1995

The Risk of Midline Catheterization in Hospitalized Patients: A Prospective Study

Leonard A. Mermel; Stephen Parenteau; Sen Mee Tow


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1997

Outbreak of Shigella sonnei in a clinical microbiology laboratory.

Leonard A. Mermel; Stephen L. Josephson; Jane Dempsey; Stephen Parenteau; C Perry; N Magill


Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2004

What happens when automated blood culture instrument detect growth but there are no technologists in the microbiology laboratory

Thomas Savinelli; Stephen Parenteau; Leonard A. Mermel


American Journal of Infection Control | 2005

Use of failure mode and effect analysis (FMEA) to improve active surveillance for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) at a university-affiliated medical center

S. Monti; Julie Jefferson; Leonard A. Mermel; Stephen Parenteau; S. Kenyon; B. Cifelli

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S. Monti

Rhode Island Hospital

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Deborah Stamp

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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