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Featured researches published by Walter J. Hierholzer.


American Journal of Infection Control | 1995

Recommendations for preventing the spread of vancomycin resistance: Recommendations of the Hospital Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee (HICPAC)

Walter J. Hierholzer; Julia S. Garner; Audrey B. Adams; Donald E. Craven; David W. Fleming; Susan W. Forlenza; Mary J. R. Gilchrist; Donald A. Goldmann; Elaine Larson; C. Glen Mayhall; Rita D. McCormick; Ronald Lee Nichols

A rapid increase in the incidence of infection and colonization with vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) has been reported from U.S. hospitals in the last 5 years. This increase poses several problems, including a) the lack of available antimicrobials for therapy of infections due to VRE, since most VRE are also resistant to multiple other drugs, e.g., aminoglycosides and ampicillin, previously used for the treatment of infections due to these organisms, and b) the possibility that the vancomycin resistance genes present in VRE may be transferred to other gram-positive microorganisms such as Staphylococcus aureus. An increased risk of VRE infection and colonization has been associated with previous vancomycin and/or multi-antimicrobial therapy, severe underlying disease or immunosuppression, and intra-abdominal surgery. Because enterococci can be found in the normal gastrointestinal or female genital tract, most enterococcal infections have been attributed to endogenous sources within the individual patient. However, recent reports of outbreaks and endemic infections due to enterococci, including VRE, have shown that patient-to-patient transmission of the microorganisms can occur either via direct contact or indirectly via hands of personnel or contaminated patient-care equipment or environmental surfaces.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1995

The evolving epidemiology of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus at a university hospital.

Marcelle C. Layton; Walter J. Hierholzer; Jan Evans Patterson

OBJECTIVE To describe the epidemiology of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) at a university hospital during a 14-month period. DESIGN Prospective laboratory-based surveillance for MRSA with descriptive epidemiology based on medical chart review and characterization of strains by DNA typing, using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). SETTING An 850-bed tertiary care university hospital. PATIENTS Patients with clinical isolates of MRSA. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE Determination whether MRSA isolates were community- or hospital-related. RESULTS Among 87 patients with MRSA, 36 (41%) had community-acquired infections. Community acquisition was associated with recent hospitalization, previous antibiotic therapy, nursing home residence, and intravenous drug use. Greater than 3 months had elapsed from the time of discharge for 13 (62%) of the 21 patients with community-acquired isolates hospitalized within the last year. Eight patients (22%) with community-acquired MRSA had no discernible risk factors. PFGE allowed differentiation of 35 distinct whole-cell DNA patterns; heterogeneity was seen among both nosocomial and community-acquired isolates, with few instances of cross-transmission. CONCLUSIONS Our data suggest an increase in community acquisition of MRSA. PFGE demonstrated heterogeneity of MRSA isolates from both the community and the hospital setting.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1991

Association of contaminated gloves with transmission of Acinetobacter calcoaceticus var. anitratus in an intensive care unit

Jan Evans Patterson; John Vecchio; Elizabeth L. Pantelick; Patricia A. Farrel; Dorothy Mazon; Marcus J. Zervos; Walter J. Hierholzer

PURPOSE Acinetobacter calcoaceticus var. anitratus is an important nosocomial pathogen that has been associated with environmental reservoirs. An increased isolation rate of A. anitratus in our intensive care units (ICUs), from 0.03% (two of 7,800) to 0.5% (seven of 1,300) (p less than 0.00003), prompted an investigation. PATIENTS, METHODS, AND RESULTS Ten patients were admitted to the surgical ICU and nine to the medical ICU during the outbreak period (late December 1987 to January 1988). Controls were all patients on the units who were not infected or colonized with the transmitted strain of A. anitratus. Three patients had A. anitratus pneumonia. A throat culture prevalence survey demonstrated three patients colonized with A. anitratus. Cases were placed in a cohort and symptomatic cases treated. An epidemiologic investigation was conducted to identify reservoirs and modes of transmission. Latex gloves were being used for universal precautions without routine changing of gloves between patients. Environmental sources culture-positive for A. antitratus included a small volume medication nebulizer and gloves in use for patient care. Plasmid typing showed that plasmid profiles of isolates from two symptomatic patients, two colonized patients, the nebulizer, and the gloves were identical. Other A. anitratus ICU isolates had distinct plasmid profiles. All patients with the transmitted strain had been in the surgical ICU. The need for changing gloves between patients and contaminated body sites was reinforced. CONCLUSION Gloves, used incorrectly for universal precautions, may potentially transmit A. anitratus.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1999

A Decade of Prevalence Surveys in a Tertiary-Care Center: Trends in Nosocomial Infection Rates, Device Utilization, and Patient Acuity

Jeffrey W. Weinstein; Dorothy Mazon; Elizabeth L. Pantelick; Patricia Reagan-Cirincione; Louise M. Dembry; Walter J. Hierholzer

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the usefulness of repeated prevalence surveys to determine trends in the rates of nosocomial infections and to detect changes in risk factors (e.g., use of invasive devices) associated with nosocomial infections. PATIENTS AND METHODS Ten annual prevalence surveys were conducted by trained infection control practitioners between 1985 and 1995 for acute-care patients on the medical, surgical, pediatric, and obstetric-gynecologic services at a 900-bed, tertiary-care, teaching hospital with 750 acute-care beds. The same methods of chart review and concurrent reporting from nursing, the microbiology and clinical laboratory, and the pharmacy were used each year to collect data on the prevalence of nosocomial infections, invasive-device utilization, and abnormal laboratory indicators. Although data were collected on a single day, a period-prevalence study approach was used, because charts were reviewed for any infection data occurring within the 7 days prior to the survey. RESULTS The hospital census for acute care patients, as measured by the prevalence surveys, declined sharply over the 10 years, from 673 to 575 patients (P = .02). However, the medical service census increased from 150 to 188 patients (P = .01). During the same period, there was a significant decrease in the mean length of stay, from 7.3 to 6.0 days (P = .01), and a concomitant increase in the mean diagnosis related-group case-mix index, from 1.03 to 1.24 (P = .001). Overall, nosocomial infection rates remained unchanged over the study period (mean of 9.85 infections per 100 patients), but rates of nosocomial bloodstream infection increased from 0.0% in 1985 to 2.3% in 1995 (P = .05). Nosocomial infection rates were significantly higher on the medical and surgical services than on other services (P<.001). Utilization rates increased significantly for Foley catheters (9.0% to 16.0%, P = .002) and ventilators (5.0% to 8.0%, P = .05). CONCLUSIONS Despite apparent increases in the severity of illness of our patients, overall rates of nosocomial infection remained stable during a decade of study. Rates of nosocomial bloodstream infection increased, in parallel with National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance System data. We found repeated prevalence surveys to be useful in following trends and rates of infection, device utilization, and abnormal laboratory values among patients at our institution. Such methodologies can be valuable and low-cost components of a comprehensive infection surveillance, prevention, and control program and other potential quality-improvement initiatives, because they enable better annual planning of departmental strategies to meet hospital needs.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1991

Effect of an automated sink on handwashing practices and attitudes in high-risk units.

Elaine Larson; Allison J. McGeer; Z. Ahmed Quraishi; Dina A. Krenzischek; B. J. Parsons; Jack Holdford; Walter J. Hierholzer

OBJECTIVE To assess the effects of an automated sink on handwashing practices and attitudes of staff. DESIGN Quasi-experimental crossover design. SETTING Two high-risk patient care areas, one postanesthesia recovery room (Site 1), and one neonatal intensive care unit (Site 2) in two tertiary care hospitals. PARTICIPANTS All patient care staff on study units; approximately 55 individuals. INTERVENTIONS An automated sink was installed to replace one handwashing sink for about five weeks; the sink was then crossed-over for an equivalent time period to the other location. Handwashing practices of all unit staff were observed in three two-hour observation periods/week. Questionnaires were distributed to staff two weeks after sink installation and at the studys end. RESULTS One thousand, six hundred ten handwashes were observed. Handwashing practices differed significantly by site. For both sites, hands were washed significantly better but significantly less often with the automated sink (all p less than .001). Staff expressed negative attitudes, however, about certain features of the sink, and these negative attitudes increased over the study period. CONCLUSIONS Automated devices must be flexible enough to allow adjustments based on staff acceptance. Application of new technology to improve hand hygiene requires a multifaceted approach to behavior change.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1988

Linking hospital epidemiology and quality assurance: seasoned concepts in a new role.

William B. Crede; Walter J. Hierholzer

In this initial presentation, certain concepts central to infection control epidemiology have been discussed and related to the evaluation of noninfectious events in medical care. While most of the examples have focused on parallels in noninfectious hazards of hospital care, a more global evaluation of the functional benefit(s) and cost-effectiveness of medical care intervention using similar epidemiologic principles is possible and of equal value. These issues will be discussed in future presentations. It will be our continuing thesis that the current infection control practitioner and hospital epidemiologist will need to become more involved in the quality assurance and risk management activities of their institutions and that training in all fields of medical care evaluation will need to be founded in epidemiology. Programs in quality assurance and risk management must adopt the use of these standard methods and must generate the databases to allow variations from norms in clinical practice to be evaluated. Those in infection control will need to broaden their expertise to include more sophisticated statistical methods, newer strategies in the observational studies of clinical care, the fundamentals of clinical information systems and data handling, and the appropriate national and regional sources of comparative clinical data. Future articles in the Topics series will provide reviews in these areas and serve as a forum for issues in the changing field of hospital epidemiology. The editors welcome comments on the series or manuscripts for review for possible publication.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1988

Description of Case-Mix Adjusters by the Severity of Illness Working Group of The Society of Hospital Epidemiologists of America (SHEA)

Peter A. Gross; B. Eugene Beyt; Michael D. Decker; Richard A. Garibaldi; Walter J. Hierholzer; William R. Jarvis; Elaine Larson; Bryan Simmons; William E. Scheckler; Lorraine Messinger Harkavy

Hospitals, insurance companies, and federal and state governments are increasingly concerned about reducing patient cost expenditures while maintaining high quality patient care. One method of reducing expenditures has been to tie hospital reimbursement with a prospective payment system based on diagnosis-related groups (DRGs). However, reimbursement under the DRG system is not acceptable for all patients in all hospitals because it is neither an accurate predictor of costs nor of clinical outcome. This deficiency poses significant problems for hospitals because DRGs are used nationwide as the prospective payment system for inpatients covered by Medicare. Several case-mix adjusters have been proposed to modify DRGs to improve their accuracy in predicting costs and outcome. We reviewed five of the most widely available indices: Acute Physiologic and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II), Coded Disease Staging, Computerized Severity Index (CSI), Medical Illness Severity Group System (MEDISGROUPS), and Patient Management Categories (PMC). Recommendations for the use of a single case-mix adjuster cannot be made at this time because all indices have not been compared in sufficiently diverse settings and because some are better predictors of costs while others are better predictors of clinical outcome. Hospital epidemiologists and other infection control practitioners should be informed about these indices and their potential applications as they expand their role beyond infection control problems to issues concerning cost containment, quality assurance, and reimbursement.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1991

Health care data, the epidemiologist's sand: Comments on the quantity and quality of data

Walter J. Hierholzer

Massive amounts of health care data are currently available for epidemiologic review through improvements in computerization and electronic communication. Multiple abstracts of patient care data are collected, stored, retrieved, and analyzed to study health care practice and outcome. The high level of variation in data from these sources is noted. Examples of these data collections are reviewed and the issues of the quality of these data for research and evaluation are discussed. Increased amounts of poor quality data will not be helpful. Collections from the National Center for Health Statistics and other sources are cited as models for improved standards for quality data banks and registries, including the Centers for Disease Control National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance collection. Throughout, a metaphor relating quality of sand for the production of lens instruments to view scientific change is used.


American Journal of Infection Control | 1990

Infection control practices in Connecticut's skilled nursing facilities.

David A. Pearson; Patricia J. Checko; Walter J. Hierholzer; James F. Jekel

Questionnaires were sent to all skilled nursing homes in Connecticut as part of a larger study of nosocomial infections, infection risks, and infection control programs. This article describes surveillance practices, isolation practices, control measures, and employee health activities of skilled nursing homes in Connecticut. The overwhelming majority of skilled nursing homes used written criteria to determine nosocomial infections, and all undertook surveillance; the majority did surveillance at least weekly and 21% did on a daily basis. The most frequent source of information for reporting infections were microbiology reports and information from the charge nurse. Three fourths of the skilled nursing homes stated that the responsibility of reporting communicable disease is that of the infection control practitioner. Two thirds of the skilled nursing homes stated that they had policies on the reporting of isolation practices, including the refusal or acceptance of patients with infections; 38% had residents under isolation precautions. Of all the patient care control measures, only that of changing urinary catheters on a routine basis was associated with facility size. More than 90% of facilities reported having an employee health program, but the benefit was limited.


Medical Anthropology | 1978

Part four: Birth and survival patterns in numerically unstable proto agricultural societies in the Brazilian Amazon

Francis L. Black; Francisco Dep. Pinheiro; Otavio Oliva; Walter J. Hierholzer; Richard V. Lee; Joan E. Briller; Virginia A. Richards

Abstract Demographic characteristics of eight diverse unacculturated tribes of Para state of Brazil are examined. Serial censuses reveal highly unstable patterns and standard demographic procedures based on the assumption of a steady state are not applicable to current data. Postulating that prior to regular contacts with the national culture the population changes in the several tribes were asynchronous, we have used the average of the several tribes as reconstructed for the period prior to 1960 as a basis for analyses. These data indicate that fertility regulation was more important than mortality in determining the selective potential. Variance in male fertility in polygamous tribes was much greater than variance of female fertility or male fertility in monogamous tribes. In general, fertility and mortality rates in the Para tribes were more like other Brazilian tribes and the !Kung of Africa than like the Yanomama of Venezuela.

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Stephen A. Streed

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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Charles M. Helms

National Institutes of Health

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