Use of the Appropriateness Evaluation Protocol for Estimating the Incremental Costs Associated With Nosocomial Infections

Abstract
Existing methods for estimating additional days of hospital stay due to nosocomial infections (NI) have a number of documented limitations. An alternative method described in this paper uses the Appropriateness Evaluation Protocol (AEP) to determine whether each day of acute inpatient care is appropriate based on the need for care of the NI, original cause of hospitalization (OC), or combined NI-OC requirements. Using this method to identify specific days of hospitalization due to Staphylococcus aureus nosocomial infection, we find: 1) length of stay is increased for only a minority of patients (38%); 2) an average of 20 additional days of stay occurred for patients with 1 or more days attributed to NI; and 3) an average of 52% of length of stay of patients with 1 or more days attributed to NI can be attributed to the NI. Application of the AEP-based method is a useful alternative for identifying additional days of stay due to NI.