Posted on 03/04/2007 6:18:03 AM PST by Dysart
The week before Christmas was filled with excitement for 6-year-old Macenzie and her mother, Lacie Simmons.
They decorated the tree, shopped and put an inflatable snow globe in the yard.
The festive mood ended abruptly Dec. 20 when Simmons collapsed in the hallway of her parents' Grand Prairie home. When the EMTs arrived, Macenzie clung to her mother.
"I just need to take care of my mom," she repeated as she patted her mother's arm. It was the last time she saw her mother alive.
"Her blood pressure bottomed out, her heart failed and that was it," said Lacie's mother, Renee Simmons.
Within 26 hours, Lacie Simmons was dead. A preliminary autopsy showed that an infection killed her. Back surgery three weeks earlier had hardly slowed the single mother.
But her parents believe she picked up the infection after surgery to fuse two discs in her spine.
Anyone who goes into the hospital could end up the same way as Lacie, who was just 28 and healthy, Simmons said.
"It's a crapshoot," she said.
Each year, an estimated 2 million patients -- 1 in 20 people -- get a serious infection while hospitalized on an outpatient or inpatient basis, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
More than 90,000 of these patients die, most often from infections acquired through intravenous tubes, catheters and ventilators. Treating them costs the country more than $4.5 billion a year.
Infections lurking in the nation's hospitals have been a well-kept secret for years because information is not publicly reported, said Lisa McGiffert, director of Consumers Union's Stop Hospital Infection Campaign in Austin.
"People need to understand that hospitals are full of bacteria," she said. "It lives in the environment, and nurses and doctors carry that bacteria from patient to patient."
Many hospitals already collect data and are trying to address infection rates with prevention programs. The Dallas-Fort Worth Hospital Council shares data on infection rates with medical facilities throughout the area.
At least 39 states have introduced legislation pushing hospitals to publicly disclose how many patients get serious infections, McGiffert said.
In Texas, Rep. Joe Straus, R-San Antonio, introduced a bill in the new legislative session to require reporting of methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, which can cause deadly staph infections.
The Advisory Panel on Health-Care Associated Infections' recommendations focus on creating a reporting system that reduces infection rates, said Joel Ballew, director of government affairs for Texas Health Resources, a faith-based healthcare provider that includes Harris Methodist Hospital System, Presbyterian Health Care Resources and Arlington Memorial Hospital. The recommendations also seek to educate consumers and reduce healthcare costs.
"Hopefully, it's a win-win for everyone," Ballew said.
Sen. Jane Nelson, R-Lewisville, Rep. Yvonne Davis, D-Dallas, and Rep Dianne Delisi, R-Temple, have filed bills that follow the recommendations. Their proposals call for a mandatory, phased-in reporting system, with central line bloodstream infections, surgical sites and respiratory infections measured first.
The last thing a sick person needs is another illness, which is why it's so important that steps are taken to minimize exposure to infections, Nelson said.
"We don't want people to be afraid to go to the hospital when they need to because they're afraid they'll come out sicker than when they went in," she said.
The problem's root
Four years after drug companies starting mass-producing penicillin in 1943, microbes that could resist it started cropping up, according to the Food and Drug Administration.
In the 1970s, the problem worsened as soldiers returning from Vietnam brought home penicillin-resistant gonorrhea. Since then, overuse of antibiotics led to a growing list of drug-resistant organisms. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that, today, 70 percent of the bacteria that cause hospital infections are resistant to at least one antibiotic.
One of the biggest threats is the staph infection MRSA. Nearly three-fourths of patients' rooms are contaminated with the bacteria that cause it, according to the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths, or RID, an advocacy group. A healthcare worker need only touch a contaminated cabinet or bedrail to spread the infection to the next person. White coats, stethoscopes and blood pressure cuffs can also carry bacteria.
Myron Skinner, a retired Fort Worth pathologist, got a staph infection after heart surgery in 2006.
Skinner was a robust 81-year-old who had spent a month traveling through Europe before coming home to have surgery. Skinner and his wife, Jane, expected him to recover without complications.
"When he went through the doors to surgery, I never thought I would not have another trip to Europe -- and neither did he," Jane Skinner said. "He was as chipper as he could be."
A week after surgery, his lungs filled with fluid and staph pneumonia set in, Skinner said. Doctors tried at least seven antibiotics before he died six weeks later.
Watchdog groups have taken a close look at how the nation's hospitals got so sick. The biggest culprit: lack of hygiene.
While CDC guidelines call for health professionals to clean their hands between patients and wear a mask, sterile gown and gloves while inserting an IV, in reality, it happens less than 50 percent of the time, according to the National Quality Forum.
"It's something our mothers taught us, but people get busy and don't realize they haven't washed their hands," said Dr. William Sutker, director of medical education for Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas.
Hand-washing could prevent 20,000 patient deaths each year, according to the CDC.
"We can't get rid of all infections just by washing our hands every time, but that will help," McGiffert said.
Jean Czajkowski's 80-year-old mother developed several infections after gallbladder surgery in 2005. Czajkowski said she watched a nurse insert a catheter in her mother, then touch monitors, bedrails and other objects throughout the room, all while wearing the same pair of contaminated gloves.
"I think the gloves give people a false sense of security," said Czajkowski, of Fort Worth. "The mentality of the healthcare professional seems to be that if they are protecting themselves with the gloves, they do not have to worry about what they touch and contaminate for the next patient, doctor, visitor or nurse."
Measuring infection rates
Most hospitals collect infection data, but few report the results to a regulatory agency, accreditation board or the public, according to Consumers Union.
Since 1970, the CDC has had a voluntary reporting program. More recently, Hospital Compare, a Web site created by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, asked hospitals to provide data on quality control measures, such as the use of preventative antibiotics before surgery. But consumers say the data are often dated and of limited use.
Consumers don't know what they're getting into until they're hospitalized, said Dorrine DeChant of Fort Worth.
When her father, Tom DeChant, a 78-year-old retired postal worker, was admitted to a San Antonio hospital for the treatment of gastric bleeding, he expected to be released within a few days. But as the days turned to weeks and he grew more lethargic, it became clear something was terribly wrong.
On June 12, six weeks after DeChant was hospitalized, he died. After DeChant's death, his family learned the bacteria that causes Legionnaires' disease had gotten into the hospital's water system, infecting him and others.
Since then, Dorrine DeChant has pushed for legislation to require public reporting by hospitals. She sees the proposed legislation as a good start.
"Imagine if a Boeing 757 was crashing every day of the year with no survivors," DeChant said. "That's how many people die from hospital-acquired infections."
What is needed is a mandatory reporting system that is useful to consumers, McGiffert said. Hospitals are keen on pushing for process measures -- such as the number of patients given antibiotics before surgery -- when what they should be measuring is whether those processes work, she said.
"What people want to see is how likely it is I will get an infection at that hospital," McGiffert said. "Measuring processes doesn't translate into reducing infections."
Public reporting of infection rates has a dual benefit, said Star West, Texas Hospital Association's director of policy analysis.
"It gives hospitals an incentive to get infection rates down," she said. "But it also gives consumers information on which hospitals have the highest infection rates."
Most hospitals already keep tabs on the most serious infections, said Dr. Joseph Prosser, vice president and chief quality officer for Harris Methodist Fort Worth hospital. Less serious ones are managed and treated, but not tracked as much.
"We apply our resources to those truly life-threatening infections -- such as bloodstream or pneumonia -- that clearly have a much greater risk of death," he said.
Infection rates can vary from one hospital to another, making it difficult to compare medical facilities that treat many patients with compromised immune systems and conditions that make them vulnerable with those that do not, said Dr. Ken Smithson, vice president of research at VHA, a national healthcare alliance.
Consumers need to understand that not every infection acquired in a hospital is preventable, he said.
"Someone with a bullet wound is mostly likely to have an infection, and it's no slam on the hospital," Smithson said. "What is important is to subtract out cases that are not preventable so we can get an idea of what is preventable."
Pennsylvania pioneers reporting
Pennsylvania, the first state to require public reporting, found that in 2005 an average of 1.2 per 1,000 patients got infections while hospitalized. Of the 19,154 patients who got sick, 2,478 died.
It's still too early to tell how effective this kind of public reporting will be, but, anecdotally, Pennsylvania is doing more to prevent infections than states without laws, McGiffert said.
Pennsylvania is getting patients off ventilators quickly, using urinary catheters less and deploying rapid response teams at the first sign of a patient's decline.
Advocates are encouraging hospitals nationwide to test patients for MRSA.
Testing is especially important because MRSA can be found outside of hospitals. It commonly appears as painful swollen skin infections. In 2003, the CDC found that 12 percent of people with MRSA had no contact with a hospital before the infection.
Information on MRSA is collected and given back to hospitals to alert them to increases in the infection, said Susan McBride, vice president of data initiative at the Dallas-Fort Worth Hospital Council.
"It's showing up in healthy athletes, in hot yoga studios and day-care centers." she said. "It's anywhere, anytime you have a lot of people in close proximity."
Lately staph infections rates have been pretty flat in hospitals, which means people are bringing them into medical facilities, McBride said.
Infections can be prevented through education, common sense and techniques that are clinically proven to be effective, McGiffert said.
"We can save a lot of lives pretty easily, if hospitals would just get right down to it," she said.
Area hospitals are trying to do just that by emphasizing hand-washing and other measures.
At Baylor, alcohol foam dispensers make hand-washing more convenient, Sutker said. Patients are also given cards encouraging them to ask their doctor about hand-washing.
Following these steps not only saves lives, it can save money.
The average additional cost for treating a patient who gets an infection is more than $15,000, according to Consumers Union.
Hospitals are really working to turn things around, Prosser said.
"There's a great deal of focus on doing the right thing for the right patient at the right time," he said.
Such efforts may have come too late for Lacie Simmons, but her family hopes to spare others of the same fate.
"She was young, she was healthy," said her mother, Renee Simmons. "This should not have happened."
IN THE KNOW
How to reduce your risk of getting an infection in a hospital
Ask hospital staff to clean their hands before treating you.
Ask that the diaphragm of the stethoscope be wiped with alcohol before use.
If you need a central line catheter, ask your doctor about one that is antibiotic-impregnated or silver-chlorhexidine coated to reduce infections.
If you need surgery, choose a surgeon with a low infection rate. Surgeons know their rate of infection for various procedures. If a surgeon refuses to tell you, consider choosing someone else.
Three to five days before surgery, shower daily with 4 percent chlorhexidine soap, available through pharmacies.
Ask your surgeon to have you tested for staphylococcus aureus at least a week before you are hospitalized.
Stop smoking well in advance of your surgery. Patients who smoke are three times as likely to develop a surgical site infection as nonsmokers.
On the day of surgery, remind your doctor that you may need an antibiotic one hour before the first incision.
Ask that you be kept warm during surgery. Patients who are kept warm resist infection better. Special blankets, hats, booties and warmed IV liquids can help.
Do not shave the surgical site. If hair must be removed, ask that clippers be used.
Ask that your surgeon limit the number of people in the operating room.
Ask your doctor about monitoring your glucose levels continuously during and after surgery, especially if you are having cardiac surgery. The stress of surgery often makes glucose levels spike erratically. When blood glucose levels are controlled to stay at 80-110 mg/unit, heart patients resist infection better.
Avoid a urinary tract catheter if possible. Ask for a diaper or bedpan instead.
If you must have an IV, make sure that it is inserted and removed under clean conditions and changed every three to four days. Alert hospital staff if any redness appears.
If you are planning to have a cesarean section take the same precautions as you would for any surgery. Women who have cesarean sections are 10 times more at risk for infection that those who give birth vaginally.
SOURCE: Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths
The "In The Know" section at the bottom of the post listed many of the things that you can do.
I've been hospitalized once; back in early 2000 I came down with an aggressive form of double pneumonia, delirious, I was admitted and given a 50% chance of survival. After hitting me with heavy doses of antibiotics, steroids, and nebulizer treatments, I slowly walked out of that hospital eight days later.(Spent another month at home recovering.) And I was otherwise a very healthy young man. I thank God for that hospital and physicians who directed my care. Looking back, it's fortuitous that I didn't acquire another pathogen while hospitalized because I likely wouldn't have been able to fight it off.
Xray cassettes, esp the ones placed under patients during portable procedures, are in my mind one of the most filthy, germ carrying items in the hospital. Demand to have them wiped down first!
"If you need surgery, choose a surgeon with a low infection rate. Surgeons know their rate of infection for various procedures."
I wonder if public disclosure of this information should be mandated by statute?
A good surgeon will be open about that if you ask. A state mandate wouldn't matter if the patient is oblivious to the issue.
Computer keyboards in hospitals couldn't be much better.
excellent thread
No, I want a vaccine.
Research to be funded under national defense, as should be all infectious disease protection measures. War has changed.
BOOKbump
It is astonishing unless you or someone close to you has been in the system. I believe it will change now that the problems aren't merely whispered about by tiny voices, but exposed in vivid detail by the media. Sometimes they get it right.
Future reference
My heart goes out to you, this is absolutely heartbreaking.
Greetings:
I recall the days of the good old USSR when hospitals would move corpses between one another so as to conform to alloted death rates.
G
I take it you're serious? That would be amusing were it not so morbid. Okay, it's still a bit amusing in a futility-of-communism-context.
When I was young I had a friend whose mother was a nurse. He said that she had told him to avoid going into the hospital if he possibly could. Its the place where all the diseases brought together.
My mother has a MRSA infection in the remaining bone of her thigh per the bone scan. The MRI was needed to determine where the pockets of infection were outside of the bone. The IV must run for 120 or more minutes according to the instructions that are included with each ball. Each of the balls so far are 175ml. Most of the time the ball flows for much more than the 120 minutes, today it took 3 1/2 hours.
A blood sample is taken once a week prior to my connecting the IV. An RN comes to draw the blood.
Thanks for the information.
This thread reminded me of Andy Stephenson.
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