P-1104. Multidrug-Resistant Organism (MDRO)-Contaminated Mobile Equipment Networks in Skilled Nursing Facilities
Lindsay D Visnovsky, Molly Leecaster, George G Vega Yon, Catherine M Loc-Carrillo, Egenia Dorsan, Tavis Huber, Styn M Jamu, Kristina Stratford, Matthew H Samore, Frank A Drews

TL;DR
This study examines how mobile equipment in nursing homes may spread drug-resistant bacteria by moving between patient rooms.
Contribution
The study introduces a network-based approach to analyze how shared equipment contributes to MDRO contamination patterns in skilled nursing facilities.
Findings
Mobile equipment like shower beds and Hoyer lifts frequently move between rooms and are often contaminated with MDROs.
Rooms connected by shared equipment were more likely to share the same MDRO contamination in one facility.
Contamination levels varied by facility and equipment type, with ESBLs and MRSA being the most common MDROs.
Abstract
Multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) are prevalent in skilled nursing facilities (SNFs). Mobile equipment has been linked to outbreaks but its role in MDRO endemicity is less understood.Figure 1.Median Number of Patient Rooms Visited (Degree) of Each Shared Equipment Item, by Facility**Note: Due to size limitations, a wireless sensor was not attached to the CO2 monitors, although microbiological sampling was conducted. Among the 8 potential types of equipment sampled, each facility had a unique set of equipment that was mobile and shared between patients. See Figure 2 for a facility-specific list of shared mobile equipment. Boxplots are displayed only if the item type was mobile (not a patient room composite surface) and was shared in the facility.Figure 2.Proportion of patient room composite* samples (N=174 room samples, all sites) and shared equipment† items (N=473 equipment samples,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfection Control in Healthcare · Healthcare Facilities Design and Sustainability · Bacillus and Francisella bacterial research
