Background: Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) are an increasing public health threat. Measuring disease burden in disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) allows the combination of morbidity and mortality into one figure, as it represents the summation of years lived with disability and years of life lost.
Aim: To evaluate the incidence, attributable deaths and burden of the most significant HAIs in Italy.
Methods: Prevalence data from the study sample of the 2016 national Point Prevalence Survey of HAIs in acute-care settings were used to estimate the incidence of five HAIs. The methodology from the Burden of Communicable Diseases in Europe (BCoDE)-project was employed for DALY calculations, adapting the disease models to the Italian population.
Findings: We estimated a total of 641,065 (95% uncertainty interval, UI 585,543.00-699,207.90) new yearly cases of HAIs and 29,375 (95% UI 23,705.97-35,905.80) deaths in Italy in 2016. The total annual DALYs were estimated to be 424,657.45 (95% UI 346,240.35-513,357.28), corresponding to 702.53 DALYs (95% UI 575.22-844.66) per 100,000 general population. Bloodstream infections accounted for the majority of total DALYs (59%), healthcare-associated pneumonia for 29%, surgical site infections for 9%, CDI for 2% and urinary tract infections accounted for less than 1% of total DALYs.
Conclusion: Results of this study suggest HAIs have a substantial burden in Italy. Reducing the burden of HAIs through infection prevention and control efforts is an achievable goal. This study provides data that could be used to guide policy-makers in the implementation of these measures.
Keywords: Burden; DALY; Healthcare-associated infections; Italy.
Copyright © 2021 The Healthcare Infection Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.