A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Gown Use in Controlling Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus Transmission Is It Worth the Price?
- 1 May 2004
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology
- Vol. 25 (5) , 418-424
- https://doi.org/10.1086/502416
Abstract
Objective: To determine the net benefit and costs associated with gown use in preventing transmission of van-comycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE).Design: A cost-benefit analysis measuring the net benefit of gowns was performed. Benefits, defined as averted costs from reduced VRE colonization and infection, were estimated using a matched cohort study. Data sources included a step-down cost allocation system, hospital informatics, and microbiology databases.Setting: The medical intensive care unit (MICU) at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri.Patients: Patients admitted to the MICU for more than 24 hours from July 1, 1997, to December 31, 1999.Interventions: Alternating periods when all healthcare workers and visitors were required to wear gowns and gloves versus gloves alone on entry to the rooms of patients colonized or infected with VRE.Results: On base-case analysis, 58 VRE cases were averted with gown use during 18 months. The annual net benefit of the gown policy was $419,346 and the cost per case averted of VRE was $1,897. The analysis was most sensitive to the level of VRE transmission.Conclusions: Infection control policies (eg, gown use) initially increase the cost of health services delivery. However, such policies can be cost saving by averting nosocomial infections and the associated costs of treatment. The cost savings to the hospital plus the benefits to patients and their families of avoiding nosocomial infections make effective infection control policies a good investment.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- ReplyClinical Infectious Diseases, 2003
- Reduced Acquisition of Vancomycin‐Resistant Enterococci: Gown Effect or Confounding?Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2003
- Laboratory-Based Surveillance for Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci: Utility of Screening Stool Specimens Submitted for Clostridium difficile Toxin AssayInfection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, 2001
- The cost of hospital-acquired infection and the value of infection controlJournal of Hospital Infection, 2000
- Reporting of Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci in Connecticut: Implementation and Validation of a State-Based Surveillance SystemInfection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, 1999
- Vancomycin-resistant Enterococci: the clinical effect of a common nosocomial pathogenDiagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease, 1999
- EVALUATING THE COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF CLINICAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH MEASURESAnnual Review of Public Health, 1998
- Measuring the costs of nosocomial infections: Methods for estimating economic burden on the hospitalThe American Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Health and Economic Impacts of Antimicrobial ResistanceClinical Infectious Diseases, 1987
- APACHE IICritical Care Medicine, 1985