DEMAND FOR ISOLATION BEDS IN A PEDIATRIC HOSPITAL

被引:13
|
作者
LANGLEY, JM
HANAKOWSKI, M
BORTOLUSSI, R
机构
[1] Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Dalhousie University
[2] Izaak Walton Killam Children's Hospital, Halifax, NS
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0196-6553(94)90069-8
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Objective: To determine isolation bed use for community-acquired and nosocomial infections in a pediatric hospital. Design: A prospective repeated point prevalence survey was conducted during a 14-month period. A questionnaire was sent to other free-standing Canadian children's hospitals to determine isolation practice and perceived needs. Setting: A university-affiliated, 218-bed pediatric hospital in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Patients: All inpatients on surveyed wards during the study period (n = 1634). Results: Overall, 13.5% of patients required isolation (range 5.6% to 31% per month). Demand was seasonal, with 71% of isolation occuring from November to April. Demand exceeded supply by 2 to 22 beds (11% to 122%). Respiratory and enteric infections requiring contact isolation accounted for 80% of use (53% and 27%, respectively). Children younger than 24 months comprised 28% of admissions and used 57% of isolation beds. Of patients isolated, 25% had nosocomial infections and 75% had community-acquired infections. The percentage of infant rooms in Canadian children's hospitals that were single bed (considered optimal for infant isolation) varied: 0% to 20% for hospitals built before 1965 and 25% to 47% for newer hospitals. All hospitals with less than 33% single-bed infant rooms perceived this allocation to be inadequate (p < 0.01 Fisher Exact Test). Conclusions: Pediatric isolation bed use varies with patient age, season of year, and category-specific isolation requirements. An increasing need for single-bed rooms is identified. Isolation requirements must be considered during the design of new hospitals or renovation of existing ones.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:207 / 211
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] THE DEMAND FOR HOSPITAL BEDS
    NEWELL, DJ
    BULLETIN OF THE INTERNATIONAL STATISTICAL INSTITUTE, 1963, 40 (02): : 1085 - 1102
  • [2] PROBLEMS IN ESTIMATING DEMAND FOR HOSPITAL BEDS
    NEWELL, DJ
    JOURNAL OF CHRONIC DISEASES, 1964, 17 (09): : 749 - &
  • [3] UNCERTAIN DEMAND, THE STRUCTURE OF HOSPITAL COSTS, AND THE COST OF EMPTY HOSPITAL BEDS
    GAYNOR, M
    ANDERSON, GF
    JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS, 1995, 14 (03) : 291 - 317
  • [4] ISOLATION USAGE IN A PEDIATRIC HOSPITAL
    KIM, MHM
    MINDORFF, C
    PATRICK, ML
    GOLD, R
    FORDJONES, EL
    INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1987, 8 (05): : 195 - 199
  • [6] THE SUPPLY AND DEMAND FOR HOSPITAL BEDS IN NEW-SOUTH-WALES
    RICHARDSON, J
    YUSUF, F
    AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIC PAPERS, 1982, 21 (38) : 148 - 169
  • [7] PREDICTION OF FUTURE-DEMAND FOR BEDS IN COMMUNITY-HOSPITAL
    BEENHAKKER, HL
    OPERATIONS RESEARCH, 1963, 11 : B38 - B39
  • [8] Applying Gravity model to predict demand of public hospital beds
    Teow, Kiok Liang
    Tan, Kelvin Bryan
    Phua, Hwee Pin
    Zhu Zhecheng
    OPERATIONS RESEARCH FOR HEALTH CARE, 2018, 17 : 65 - 70
  • [9] Policy must separate need for hospital beds from demand
    Marshall, T
    BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1999, 319 (7213): : 855 - 855
  • [10] MET AND UNMET DEMAND FOR HOSPITAL BEDS - SOME RECENT-EVIDENCE
    CULLIS, JG
    FOSTER, DP
    FROST, CEB
    REVUE D EPIDEMIOLOGIE ET DE SANTE PUBLIQUE, 1981, 29 (02): : 155 - 166