RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Results of a passive surveillance system (pneumonia confirmed by x-ray examination) suggested that in 1989 a total of 187 cases of nosocomial pneumonia had occurred at the Canandaigua Veterans Administration Medical Center among 250 long-term care patients. METHODS: A retrospective study was undertaken to validate cases and to enumerate risk factors. A chart review showed that 136 of 187 cases (72%) met predetermined criteria for nosocomial pneumonia. RESULTS: Three nursing units characterized as at high risk had a pneumonia rate of 1.90 per 1000 patient days, as compared with a rate of 0.70 cases per 1000 patient days on the two other units. There were no differences in age, mean white blood cell count, or clinical symptoms between high- and average-risk patients. Two thirds of all patients had a history of chronic aspiration. High-risk patients were more likely to be confined to bed, to have a debilitating neurologic disease, and to require tube feedings. Twenty percent of patients on high-risk units died of nosocomial pneumonia or with nosocomial pneumonia as a contributory factor. CONCLUSIONS: Facility-associated pneumonia is an important cause of morbidity and mortality in long-term care facilities.