Publication | Closed Access
A 12‐Month Fever Surveillance Study in a Veterans' Long‐Stay Institution
40
Citations
10
References
1985
Year
AntibioticsUrinary TractFever Surveillance StudyHealthcare-associated InfectionClinical EpidemiologyDiagnosisRespiratory InfectionSepsisLower Respiratory TractDisease SurveillanceInfection ControlPublic HealthFebrile EpisodesMedicineClinical MicrobiologyHospital EpidemiologyEpidemiologyCovid-19
This report describes a 12-month fever surveillance survey in a 258-bed veterans long-term care institution. There were 128 episodes of fever (one episode per 24 patient-months); 114 were studied. Lower respiratory tract infections were most frequent, 36 (32%), with 26 (23%) urinary tract infections. Streptococcus pneumoniae was the most common pathogen in the chest infections and Proteus mirabilis the most common of the urinary tract infections. In 40 (35%) there was no evidence of a lower respiratory tract, urinary tract, or other bacterial infection. Most recovered rapidly, many with no specific treatment. There was a 16% mortality associated with the febrile episodes.
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