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hospitalacquired

Hospital-acquired infection, also known as nosocomial infection, refers to an infection that a patient develops during a stay in a hospital or other healthcare facility that was not present and not incubating at the time of admission. Most definitions classify an HAI as occurring 48 hours or more after admission, or within a specified window after a surgical procedure or exposure to an invasive device.

The most common HAIs include bloodstream infections, catheter-associated urinary tract infections, ventilator-associated pneumonia, and surgical site

Risk factors for hospital-acquired infections include the use of invasive devices (such as urinary catheters, central

Prevention relies on comprehensive infection prevention programs and adherence to evidence-based practices: strict hand hygiene, appropriate

Surveillance systems track HAIs to monitor trends, benchmark performance, and guide prevention efforts. In many countries,

infections.
Other
notable
infections
include
gastrointestinal
infections
such
as
Clostridioides
difficile,
as
well
as
wound,
skin,
and
soft
tissue
infections.
Causative
organisms
frequently
implicated
in
HAIs
include
methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus
aureus
(MRSA),
vancomycin-resistant
Enterococcus
(VRE),
ESBL-producing
Enterobacterales,
Pseudomonas
aeruginosa,
and
Acinetobacter
species,
among
others.
Antifungal
and
antiviral
HAIs
also
occur,
particularly
in
severely
ill
or
immunocompromised
patients.
venous
catheters,
and
mechanical
ventilation),
longer
hospital
stays,
advanced
age,
immune
suppression,
recent
surgery,
and
prior
antibiotic
exposure.
barrier
precautions,
sterilization
and
disinfection
of
equipment,
environmental
cleaning,
antimicrobial
stewardship
to
limit
unnecessary
antibiotic
use,
timely
removal
of
unnecessary
devices,
and
care
bundles
to
reduce
device-associated
infections.
data
are
reported
as
infection
rates
per
1,000
patient-days
or
device-days.
Hospital-acquired
infections
impose
additional
morbidity,
mortality,
longer
hospital
stays,
and
higher
healthcare
costs.