Methodologic Issues in Hospital Epidemiology. I. Rates, Case-Finding, and Interpretation

Abstract
Surveys of nosocomial infection that have been published in the last two decades present great diversity in both purpose and method. These differences limit our ability to draw generalizations. Difficulties in understanding and comparing past studies derive from diverse sources. Methodologic areas where there are substantial differences include definitions of rates of infection, criteria for infection, and methods of casefinding. Studies also differ with respect to characteristics of hospital populations, their underlying diseases and their patterns of lengths of stay, clinical procedures, and efforts at prevention of infection. All of these features may change over time and vary with geographic setting. Meaningful comparisons can be made only if uniform definitions of rates are adopted, standardized methods of data collection are employed, and procedures are used to minimize problems in interpretation. These problems in interpretation arise from the confounding effects of multiple uncontrolled variables, the limited applicability of intervention trials, unmeasured perturbations in the steady-states of study populations, and subsequent difficulties in identifying causal factors and measuring their quantitative effects.