Author: Purssell, Edward; Gould, Dinah; Chudleigh, Jane
Title: Impact of isolation on hospitalised patients who are infectious: systematic review with meta-analysis Document date: 2020_2_18
ID: w05fyy4u_105
Snippet: Infection preventionists were aware that isolation could have negative effects on patients such as increased risk of anxiety, depression and falls and felt that more should be done to prevent these risks. [6] Although single rooms are assumed to reduce infection risk, evidence of ability to contain spread is equivocal [7, 8] and a recent study conducted in an all-single-room hospital was unable to demonstrate lower infection rates than in hospita.....
Document: Infection preventionists were aware that isolation could have negative effects on patients such as increased risk of anxiety, depression and falls and felt that more should be done to prevent these risks. [6] Although single rooms are assumed to reduce infection risk, evidence of ability to contain spread is equivocal [7, 8] and a recent study conducted in an all-single-room hospital was unable to demonstrate lower infection rates than in hospitals where most care takes place in open wards. [9] This study identified advantages and disadvantages of single room accommodation, whereas isolating infectious patients is generally assumed to result in adverse outcomes. [10] A systematic review reported eight years ago indicated higher levels of anxiety, depression, perceptions of stigmatisation and a higher incidence of falls, medication errors and other incidents that detract from patient safety among patients who were isolated compared to those who were not. [11] This review reported studies undertaken before 2010 and included patients whose experiences are unlikely to be comparable: children and adults and those isolated to reduce their own risk of infection as well as infectious patients. The review was not reported according to standards currently expected for systematic reviews [12] and presents a qualitative description of patient outcomes only. A more rigorously reported and up-to-date systematic review is indicated in view of increasing concern about satisfaction with health care and patient safety and increasing emphasis on infection prevention as part of the global strategy to reduce risks of antimicrobial resistance. [13] We undertook a systematic review of the literature to establish the effects of infection related isolation on psychological and non-psychological care-related outcomes in adults. This review is therefore more focussed than that previously undertaken which also included those in protective isolation, and contains a significant body of literature published since 2010.
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