Comprehensive and Detailed In-Depth Explanation:
Hand hygiene remains the single most effective intervention to prevent the spread of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE) in healthcare settings. Implementing an audit and feedback system significantly improves compliance and reduces VRE transmission.
Step-by-Step Justification:
Hand Hygiene Compliance Audit and Feedback (Best Strategy)
Studies show that poor hand hygiene is the primary mode of VRE transmission in hospitals.
Implementing real-time auditing with feedback ensures sustained compliance and helps identify weak areas.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Screening all patients and isolating VRE-positive patients:
While screening helps identify carriers, contact precautions alone are not sufficient without strong hand hygiene enforcement.
B. Restricting vancomycin use:
While antimicrobial stewardship is crucial, vancomycin use alone does not drive VRE outbreaks—poor infection control practices do.
D. Conducting environmental sampling weekly:
Routine sampling is not necessary; immediate terminal disinfection and improved hand hygiene are more effective.
CBIC Infection Control References:
APIC Text, "VRE Prevention and Hand Hygiene," Chapter 11.
APIC-JCR Workbook, "Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control Measures," Chapter 7.