EUREGIO MRSA-net Twente/Münsterland--a Dutch-German cross-border network for the prevention and control of infections caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.

A W Friedrich, I Daniels-Haardt, R Köck, F Verhoeven, A Mellmann, D Harmsen, J. E. van Gemert-Pijnen, K Becker, M G R Hendrix

Institute of Hygiene, University Hospital Munster, Germany.

Journal Article: Euro surveillance: bulletin europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin 09/2008; 13(35).

Abstract

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is associated with increased mortality and morbidity and a leading cause of hospital-acquired infections. Community-acquired (CA)-MRSA are a growing concern worldwide. In the last 10 years, an increase in the MRSA rate from 2% to approximately 23% has been observed in Germany, while a rate under 5% has been recorded for many years in the Netherlands and Scandinavia. In the Netherlands in particular, MRSA rates have become very low in stationary care due to a consistent 'search and destroy' policy. The main focus in Germany lies on hospital-acquired MRSA, whereas the Netherlands focus on the control of the importation of MRSA cases from abroad and on CA-MRSA. As MRSA in hospitals and in the community can be a problem in cross-border health care, the European Union-funded EUREGIO MRSA-net project was established in the bordering regions Twente/Achterhoek, the Netherlands and Münsterland, Germany. The main aim of the project is the creation of a network of the major health care providers in the EUREGIO and the surveillance and prevention of MRSA infections. A spa-typing network was established in order to understand the regional and cross-border dissemination of epidemic and potentially highly virulent MRSA genotypes. As the reduction of differences in health care quality is an important prerequisite for cross-border health care, a transborder quality group comprising hospitals, general practitioners, public health authorities, laboratories, and insurerance companies has been established since 2005 equalising the quality criteria for the control of MRSA on both sides of the border.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

bordering regions Twente/Achterhoek
 
Community-acquired
 
consistent 'search
 
cross-border dissemination
 
cross-border health care
 
destroy' policy
 
European Union-funded EUREGIO MRSA-net project
 
general practitioners
 
health care quality
 
hospital-acquired MRSA
 
last 10 years
 
leading cause
 
major health care providers
 
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
 
MRSA rate
 
MRSA rates
 
Netherlands focus
 
public health authorities
 
stationary care
 
transborder quality group