Use and efficacy of tuberculosis infection control practices at hospitals with previous outbreaks of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis

Jerome I. Tokars, George F. McKinley, Joan Otten, Charles Woodley, Emilia M. Sordillo, Joan Caldwell, Catherine M. Liss, Mary Ellen Gilligan, Lois Diem, Ida M. Onorato, William R. Jarvis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

40 Scopus citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the implementation and efficacy of selected Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for preventing spread of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. DESIGN: Analysis of prospective observational data. SETTING: Two medical centers where outbreaks of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) had occurred. PARTICIPANTS: All hospital inpatients who had active TB or who were placed in TB isolation and healthcare workers who were assigned to selected wards on which TB patients were treated. METHODS: During 1995 to 1997, study personnel prospectively recorded information on patients who had TB or were in TB isolation, performed observations of TB isolation rooms, and recorded tuberculin skin-test results of healthcare workers. Genetic typing of M tuberculosis isolates was performed by restriction fragment-length polymorphism analysis. RESULTS: We found that only 8.6% of patients placed in TB isolation proved to have TB; yet, 19% of patients with pulmonary TB were not isolated on the first day of hospital admission. Specimens were ordered for acid-fast bacillus smear and results received promptly, and most TB isolation rooms were under negative pressure. Among persons entering TB isolation rooms, 44.2% to 97.1% used an appropriate (particulate, high-efficiency particulate air or N95) respirator, depending on the hospital and year; others entering the rooms used a surgical mask or nothing. We did not find evidence of transmission of TB among healthcare workers (based on tuberculin skin-test results) or patients (based on epidemiological investigation and genetic typing). CONCLUSIONS: We found problems in implementation of some TB infection control measures, but no evidence of healthcare-associated transmission, possibly in part because of limitations in the number of patients and workers studied. Similar evaluations should be performed at hospitals treating TB patients to find inadequacies and guide improvements in infection control.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)449-455
Number of pages7
JournalInfection Control and Hospital Epidemiology
Volume22
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2001
Externally publishedYes

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