Journal of Community Hospital Internal Medicine Perspectives (May 2020)

An audit of inpatient stool ova and parasite (O&P) testing in a multi-hospital health system

  • Mohammad Qasim Khan,
  • Nicole Gentile,
  • Ying Zhou,
  • Becky A. Smith,
  • Richard B. Thomson,
  • Eugene F. Yen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/20009666.2020.1760422
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
pp. 204 – 209

Abstract

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Background & Objectives Stool ova and parasite (O&P) examinations are routinely ordered initial tests in patients admitted to the hospital with acute diarrhea, despite low test positivity rates. We examined the diagnostic yield of inpatient stool O&P exams and identified risk factors associated with positive tests. Methods A retrospective, case-control analysis of inpatients admitted with diarrhea, who underwent O&P examination, was conducted. Clinical and demographic variables of cases were compared with age-and gender-matched controls via uni- and multivariate conditional logistic regression analyses. Results The yield of inpatient O&P exams was 2.15% (37/1723). Blastocystisspp. represented the most common parasites. All patients with positive tests, excluding Blastocystisspp., had at least one of the following risk factors: smoking, prior parasitic disease, HIV-positive status, travel to an endemic area, and institutionalization. Conclusions Superfluous inpatient stool O&P exams confer a financial and labor burden to hospital systems. Stool O&P exams should be restricted to individuals admitted to the hospital for 7 days and possessing at least one of the following risk factors: smoking, prior parasitic disease, HIV-positive status, travel to an endemic area, and institutionalization. Such selective testing can confer a 51% reduction in testing, costs, and labor.

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