Systematic Review of Isolation Policies in the Essay

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Systematic review of isolation policies in the hospital management of methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus: A review of the literature with epidemiological and economic modelling

The rise of MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) continues to be a problem in hospitals throughout the world. In the article entitled "Systematic review of isolation policies in the hospital management of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus" Cooper (et al. 2003) conducted a literature review of various containment efforts in the UK. Isolation wards proved to be the most common method of containment but studies were conflicting as to their efficacy. The use of a common isolation ward at one hospital "reduced infection, one did not and one resulted in control for many years until a change in strain and/or an increase in the number of patients colonised on admission [and] overwhelmed the institution" (Cooper et al. 2003: 5). There was limited evidence that more proactive efforts at containment such as "single-room isolation with screening, eradication and an extensive hand-hygiene programme reduced MRSA infection and colonization hospital wide" but only one study supported this method; another single study "provided evidence that NC [nurse cohort] in single rooms with screening and eradication reduced infection hospital wide" (Cooper et al.
2003:5). The nurse cohort study used nurses conducting screening of suspected MRSA cases:

The proposed intervention using the Iowa model would use the knowledge gleaned from the literature review to create a multi-tiered prevention program that both reduced the likelihood of MRSA spreading through the hospital and used isolation and containment methods.

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