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Incidence and risk factors for catheter-associated urinary tract infection in 623 intensive care units throughout 37 Asian, African, Eastern European, Latin American, and Middle Eastern nations: A multinational prospective research of INICC
- Victor Daniel Rosenthal, Ruijie Yin, Eric Christopher Brown, Brandon Hochahn Lee, Camilla Rodrigues, Sheila Nainan Myatra, Mohit Kharbanda, Prasad Rajhans, Yatin Mehta, Subhash Kumar Todi, Sushmita Basu, Suneeta Sahu, Shakti Bedanta Mishra, Rajesh Chawla, Pravin K. Nair, Rajalakshmi Arjun, Deepak Singla, Kavita Sandhu, Vijayanand Palaniswamy, Arpita Bhakta, Mohd-Basri Mat Nor, Tai Chian-Wern, Ider Bat-Erdene, Subhash P. Acharya, Aamer Ikram, Nellie Tumu, Lili Tao, Gustavo Andres Alvarez, Sandra Liliana Valderrama-Beltran, Luisa Fernanda Jiménez-Alvarez, Claudia Milena Henao-Rodas, Katherine Gomez, Lina Alejandra Aguilar-Moreno, Yuliana Andrea Cano-Medina, Maria Adelia Zuniga-Chavarria, Guadalupe Aguirre-Avalos, Alejandro Sassoe-Gonzalez, Mary Cruz Aleman-Bocanegra, Blanca Estela Hernandez-Chena, Maria Isabel Villegas-Mota, Daisy Aguilar-de-Moros, Alex Castañeda-Sabogal, Eduardo Alexandrino Medeiros, Lourdes Dueñas, Nilton Yhuri Carreazo, Estuardo Salgado, Safaa Abdulaziz-Alkhawaja, Hala Mounir Agha, Amani Ali El-Kholy, Mohammad Abdellatif Daboor, Ertugrul Guclu, Oguz Dursun, Iftihar Koksal, Merve Havan, Suna Secil Ozturk-Deniz, Dincer Yildizdas, Emel Okulu, Abeer Aly Omar, Ziad A. Memish, Jarosław Janc, Sona Hlinkova, Wieslawa Duszynska, George Horhat-Florin, Lul Raka, Michael M. Petrov, Zhilin Jin
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- Journal:
- Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology / Volume 45 / Issue 5 / May 2024
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 January 2024, pp. 567-575
- Print publication:
- May 2024
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- Article
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Objective:
To identify urinary catheter (UC)–associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) incidence and risk factors.
Design:A prospective cohort study.
Setting:The study was conducted across 623 ICUs of 224 hospitals in 114 cities in 37 African, Asian, Eastern European, Latin American, and Middle Eastern countries.
Participants:The study included 169,036 patients, hospitalized for 1,166,593 patient days.
Methods:Data collection took place from January 1, 2014, to February 12, 2022. We identified CAUTI rates per 1,000 UC days and UC device utilization (DU) ratios stratified by country, by ICU type, by facility ownership type, by World Bank country classification by income level, and by UC type. To estimate CAUTI risk factors, we analyzed 11 variables using multiple logistic regression.
Results:Participant patients acquired 2,010 CAUTIs. The pooled CAUTI rate was 2.83 per 1,000 UC days. The highest CAUTI rate was associated with the use of suprapubic catheters (3.93 CAUTIs per 1,000 UC days); with patients hospitalized in Eastern Europe (14.03) and in Asia (6.28); with patients hospitalized in trauma (7.97), neurologic (6.28), and neurosurgical ICUs (4.95); with patients hospitalized in lower–middle-income countries (3.05); and with patients in public hospitals (5.89).
The following variables were independently associated with CAUTI: Age (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.01; P < .0001), female sex (aOR, 1.39; P < .0001), length of stay (LOS) before CAUTI-acquisition (aOR, 1.05; P < .0001), UC DU ratio (aOR, 1.09; P < .0001), public facilities (aOR, 2.24; P < .0001), and neurologic ICUs (aOR, 11.49; P < .0001).
Conclusions:CAUTI rates are higher in patients with suprapubic catheters, in middle-income countries, in public hospitals, in trauma and neurologic ICUs, and in Eastern European and Asian facilities.
Based on findings regarding risk factors for CAUTI, focus on reducing LOS and UC utilization is warranted, as well as implementing evidence-based CAUTI-prevention recommendations.
5 - Children’s Question-Asking across Cultural Communities
- Edited by Lucas Payne Butler, University of Maryland, College Park, Samuel Ronfard, Kathleen H. Corriveau, Boston University
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- Book:
- The Questioning Child
- Published online:
- 10 January 2020
- Print publication:
- 30 January 2020, pp 73-88
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- Chapter
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Summary
Young children’s questions are ubiquitous around the world, yet question–asking and –answering are cultural practices; we must investigate cultural variation in how these practices develop rather than assume that certain practices are universal. We question an assumption in the literature that children from families of lower income or schooling have “deficits” in cognitive development. In this chapter, we critique deficit approaches and review cross–cultural studies of children’s questions within the frame of avoiding deficit assumptions. We then present findings regarding children’s questions from two studies of family conversation in different communities: a diary study of children’s spontaneous conversations about nature, and a study of parent–child conversations in a sink–and–float prediction task. In both studies, contrary to deficit ideas, we found evidence that children whose parents have lower levels of schooling showed evidence of more science–related reasoning in their questions than did those from the higher schooling group – children in the “basic schooling” group asked more explanation-seeking (not fact–seeking) questions in one study, and more conceptual (not procedural) questions in the other. Asking questions may be a cultural universal, yet our findings reveal diversity and raise questions about normativity, as well as how to define sophisticated reasoning.