Study finds extensive MRSA testing may not help
Accreditation Connection, March 13, 2008
A New England Journal of the American Medical Association study now disputes the idea that widespread methicillin-resistant stapholoccocus aureus (MRSA) testing would reduce costs and cut down on healthcare-associated infections, the Chicago Tribune reports.
The study's results run contrary to strategies many hospitals are currently rolling out, involving extensive MRSA screening programs for all inpatients. According to the study, hospital-acquired MRSA infection rates were the same between a 10,000-patient control group and a second group which was tested at admission.
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