lunes, 14 de marzo de 2011

CDC -HAI Prevention Epicenters Program




CDC’s Prevention Epicenters (PE) Program is a unique research program in which CDC’s Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion (DHQP) collaborates with academic investigators to conduct innovative infection control and prevention research.

DHQP began the PE Program in 1997 as a way to work directly with academic partners to address important scientific questions regarding the prevention of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs), antibiotic resistance, and other adverse events associated with healthcare. Through a cooperative agreement mechanism, DHQP works with a network of academic centers to foster research on the epidemiology and prevention of HAI. The program has provided a unique forum in which academic leaders in healthcare epidemiology can partner directly with each other and with CDC subject matter experts to conduct innovative research designed to fill knowledge gaps that are most important from a public health perspective. Because the PE investigators work together as a group, there is an emphasis on multicenter collaborative research projects, many of which would not be possible for a single academic center. The knowledge created through the PE Program has been extremely valuable to the field, and has resulted in over 150 publications in peer-reviewed journals on a wide variety of HAI prevention topics.



$10 Million Dollars to Save Countless Lives
Categories: Healthcare-associated infections

March 14th, 2011 1:01 pm ET -


John A. Jernigan, MD, MS
Author – John Jernigan, M.D.
CDC’s Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion




Today, I am proud to announce that my office is awarding $10 million for new research to five academic medical centers as part of our Prevention Epicenter grant program. This program supports efforts to develop and test innovative approaches to reducing infections in healthcare settings. It is more than research – we are taking novel discoveries and translating them into clinical practice. These efforts save lives.

We founded the Prevention Epicenter program in 1997. CDC staff work closely with academic investigators to discover solutions, and refine them so they can work to prevent infections for all healthcare settings. It has been thrilling over the years to watch the innovations in infection prevention that have come out of this program. Some of our biggest breakthroughs in infection prevention and strategies to save lives have been rooted in research of the Prevention Epicenter program.

Some of the breakthroughs that I have been particularly proud of are:

•using skin antiseptic in routine bathing of patients to prevent HAIs, including the use of chlorhexidine to prevent Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) infections,
•developing cutting edge methods for detecting HAIs such as using computer algorithms to detect bloodstream infections, and
•pioneering a new method for determining the effectiveness of HAI prevention strategies among a large group of hospitals.

I am excited to continue our important work with the Epicenters investigators, and look forward to further advancements in HAI prevention. The institutions participating in the 2011 Prevention Epicenter Program, representing affiliated hospitals are:

•Chicago Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Prevention Epicenter (CARPE)
◦Cook County Health and Hospital System
•Rush University Duke University Prevention Epicenter
◦Duke University
•Eastern Massachusetts Prevention Epicenter
◦ Harvard Pilgrim Health Care
•Southeastern Pennsylvania Adult and Pediatric Prevention Epicenter Network
◦University of Pennsylvania
•Washington University and BJC Epi-Center for Prevention of Healthcare Associated Infections
◦Washington University
In this round of funding, we are expanding our efforts to include:

•the use of combinations of bleach and ultraviolet light to clean hospital rooms to help prevent infection,
•new tests that help distinguish patients who need antibiotics from those who don’t, as a means to prevent antibiotic- resistant infections,
•methods that can help doctors anticipate when medical devices being used to treat a patient are on the verge of causing an infection, so that device-associated infections can be averted before they begin, and
•treating patients with living microorganisms that are harmless to the patient but compete with harmful germs, as a means of preventing health care-associated infections.

We will be providing more regular updates on the research coming out of these institutions through this blog and our Prevention Epicenter website [CDC -HAI Prevention Epicenters Program: CDC -HAI Prevention Epicenters Program]. In the meantime, tell us your thoughts.

full-text:
CDC - Blogs - Safe Healthcare – $10 Million Dollars to Save Countless Lives

CDC -HAI Prevention Epicenters Program

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