Background: Patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs) are particularly susceptible to hospital-acquired infections (HAIs) and the HAIs are higher in the ICUs than other wards of the hospital. This study aimed at investigating factors associated with ICU-acquired infections incidence in Iran.
Methods: In this multi-center study, Iranian nosocomial infections surveillance (INIS) and hospital statistics and information system (AVAB) were used to collect data on patients with HAIs in 2018. The data was expanded based on 12 months of the year (13,632 records in terms of "hospital-ward-month") and then, the last observation carried forward method was used to replace the missing data. The generalized negative binomial regression with “patient-days” as an offset variable was used to identify the factors affecting ICU-acquired infections incidence.
Results: The median age of patients was 57.5 (IQR=55.09) years. Of the 22.92%, 5.76%, 13.62%, 43.41%, and 14.29% of patients were in NICU, PICU, internal ICU, general ICU, and surgical ICU, respectively. Only 13.73% of hospitals were in efficient zone (zone III). Based on multivariable regression, the number of death (IRR=1.02), the number of infections due to the device (catheters and ventilators) (IRR=1.1), ward type (PICU (IRR=1.58), internal ICU (IRR=1.63), general ICU (IRR=1.53) and surgical ICU (IRR=1.47)), hospital's expertise, hospital's accreditation, bed occupancy rate indicator (IRR=1.17 for moderate conditions) were associated with an increase of ICU-acquired infections incidence. Infection due to ventilator, infection due to catheter, and the number of surgery in hospitals reduced 5%, 7%, and 1% incidence of infections, respectively.
Conclusions: Based on the results, the most common ICU-acquired infections were VAE and UTI. Therefore due to the high sensitivity of intensive care units, full hygiene should be taught to the medical staff, especially the ICU wards. Ventilators and catheters should be used in special circumstances and minimum duration.