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Grant # R01 AI082536
Title: RISK FACTORS FOR SPREAD OF STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS IN
PRISONS
Co-PIs:
Franklin D. Lowy, MD,
Professor of Medicine
and Pathology,
Division of Infectious Diseases,
College of Physicians & Surgeons of Columbia University
and
Elaine Larson, RN, PhD,
Professor of Therapeutic and Pharmaceutical Research,
Columbia
University School of
Nursing
Funder: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National
Institutes of Health
Dates: 8/15/09 - 7/31/14
Funding: $3,721,808
The
dramatic rise in community-based S. aureus infections, many due
to methicillin resistant S. aureus (MRSA), has become an
important public health problem. This proposal will focus on
prisoners, a high-risk group that has received limited attention.
The long
term goal of this project is to develop strategies that will prevent
and control transmission of S. aureus within the prison system
as well as in similar crowded environments.
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Project Summary |
Research Team |
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PROJECT SUMMARY
The
dramatic rise in community-based S. aureus infections, many due
to methicillin resistant S. aureus (MRSA), has become an
important public health problem. This proposal will focus on
prisoners, a high-risk group that has received limited attention.
Prior studies have examined prison outbreaks without addressing
several critical questions. These questions include the role of S.
aureus colonization in the prison environment, how S. aureus
is introduced into prisons and what the modalities of S. aureus
persistence and transmission are in the nonepidemic prison setting.
Our long term goal is to develop strategies that will prevent and
control transmission of S. aureus within the prison system as
well as in similar crowded environments. Our specific aims are the
following. 1) We will identify patterns of S. aureus strain
transmission within the prison. A cross-sectional analysis of
prisoners will be performed to determine the prevalence of S.
aureus colonization and/or infection. The role of assigned
activities, environmental exposures, prisoner contacts and their
spatial proximity in S. aureus transmission will be examined.
Bacterial factors associated with the predominance of particular
clones of S. aureus will be examined. 2) We will determine the
factors associated with the development of clinical infections within
the prison. A subset of inmates with culture proven S. aureus
infections will be studied in a nested case-control study to determine
factors contributing to symptomatic infection in the prison. 3) We
will identify risk factors associated with colonization and/or
infection with S. aureus at prisoner intake and at release. New
prison inmates will be interviewed cultured and their prison/jail
records reviewed. Risk factors predictive of S. aureus
colonization/infection on arrival will be identified. Because >600,000
prisoners are released into the community each year, they can serve as
an important reservoir for staphylococcal transmission. Therefore,
S. aureus colonization at the time of release will also be
assessed and factors contributing to colonization at release will be
examined. This proposal provides an unparalleled opportunity to
examine transmission of S. aureus (including MRSA) within the
prison setting. The ongoing collaboration of prison personnel with the
investigators is unique as is the integration of methodological
approaches that will allow us to examine the roles of networks coupled
with spatia characteristics in prisons. |
RESEARCH TEAM
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faculty profile or send e-mail
| Name |
Role |
Institution / Department |
|
Franklin D. Lowy, MD
Professor of Medicine
and Pathology |
Co-Principal Investigator |
Division of Infectious Diseases,
College of Physicians & Surgeons of Columbia University |
Elaine L. Larson, RN, PhD
Professor of
Therapeutic and Pharmaceutical Research and Professor of Epidemiology |
Co-Principal Investigator |
Columbia University School of Nursing
and
Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health,
Columbia University |
Regina Dolgoarshinnykh
Assistant Professor of Statistics |
Mathematical Statistician |
Department
of Statistics, Columbia University |
Haomiao Jia, PhD
Assistant Professor of Clinical Biostatistics (in Nursing) |
Biostatistician |
Columbia University School of Nursing
and Department of Biostatistics, Mailman School of Public Health,
Columbia University |
Lester
Wright
Medical Director, NYS Department of Correctional Services |
Co-Investigator |
New York
State Department of Correctional Services |
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