Posted on 10/10/2007 6:20:55 PM PDT by oblomov
Appalling standards of care and a catalogue of failures contributed to the deaths of 331 patients in the worst outbreak of a hospital superbug ever recorded in the NHS, a report has found.
Crowded wards, a shortage of nurses and financial problems led to 1,176 people contracting Clostridium difficile over two and half years at three hospitals in Kent.
Though the superbug was rife on the wards, managers failed to act. Isolation units were not set up, nurses were so rushed they did not have time to wash their hands and patients were left in soiled beds.
Bedpans were not decontaminated properly and beds were not cleaned as well as they should have been.
The health watchdog, the Healthcare Commission, concluded that the infection probably or definitely killed at least 90 patients and was a factor in the deaths of a further 241.
Fourteen patients who died were found to have C.diff but it did not contribute to their deaths. In total 345 people died with the infection.
The report said some patients at the hospitals run by the Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Hospital Trust should have made a full recovery from their initial illness. But they caught the bug and died. Police will determine if there are grounds for criminal charges.
(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...
Jocelyn Elders - aka Doctor Dingbat
There is another wonderful thought about a potential Hillary White House - having another dimwitted, socially retarded loser as Surgeon General.
Absolutely correct. My mother went to the care of God in May 2007 after she contracted Cdiff through a pic-line in her wrist and couldn't shake it.
6 different anti-biotics in massive quantities and they just couldn't get the stuff into her fast enough. It killed her in 10 days. Make no mistake, it's a nasty bug.
This all went down in a well-known, high-profile hospital that I won't name, but safe to say - it can easily happen right here in the USA. The best bet is to stay the heck out of the hospital at all costs.
Hinckley, I believe you’re right.
My late wife became very ill (on top of cancer) after a hospital stay,and, from the symptoms, I suspect it was clostridium.
Thanks for the date check reminder, I just tossed mine.
Can tetracycline be stored in the same locker with DDT, Chlordane, mercury, & freon :)
Thursday October 11, 2007
Guardian Unlimited
What is Clostridium difficile?
C difficile is a virulent new strain of bacteria linked to three times as many deaths as the notorious hospital superbug MRSA. It is a common bacteria carried harmlessly in the gut of half of all children aged under two, and many adults. Unlike MRSA, C difficile is not resistant to antibiotics and not officially recognised as a superbug by the Department of Health (DoH).
Why is it in the news?
A report by NHS watchdog, the Healthcare Commission, found that 1,100 patients at the three Kent hospitals run by the Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust contracted the bug between April 2004 and September 2006. Of these patients, 345 mainly older patients with multiple medical problems died, 90 of whom the report found “definitely or probably” did so as a result of the infection. Dirty wards and staff shortages were among the causes of two outbreaks at the trust in the autumn of 2005 and early 2006, inspectors found.
snip... more at link
http://www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,2188456,00.html
But I'm willing to bet if it killed 300+ patients in one US hospital I'm sure it would get more than a passing mention on page A32.
The first thing that would happen is they'd blame President Bush.
We haven't had to do this in years!! Our bedpans are DISPOSABLE!!
C. Diff has turned into a serious "bug" here as well. There have been deaths. But, aggressive precautions such private rooms and terminal room decontamination has gone a long way. As has our DISPOSABLE isolation gowns, disposable temp dots, etc. all of which cost money.
Today anyone in a hospital and getting most antibiotics should also be on a pro-biotic.
[It is a common bacteria carried harmlessly in the gut of half of all children aged under two, and many adults. Unlike MRSA, C difficile is not resistant to antibiotics and not officially recognised as a superbug by the Department of Health (DoH).]
I have a brother-in-law who had most of his colon removed thanks to this bug. He went to the VA for some other condition. They prescribed anti-biotics and the anti-biotics killed off the beneficial bacteria in his digestive tract. This created an environment where the c-dif was able to flourish.... He's lucky to be alive and gets to drag one of those lovely bags around for the rest of his days.
this is not a mystery....
people in a hospital for any length of time are sick, vulnerable....they are prime examples of people that can easily catch an intestinal bug...
so avoid hospitals that have sick people and nursing homes....elderly would be better off at home with their family/kids...
the less exposure for the chronically ill and the elderly, the better....fewer coughs, colds, sneezes, diarrhea, spit, drool, etc etc....
I hate the attitude that people are supposed to live forever, and especially the chronically ill...that dying is just going to be in our sleep, and that we have conquered all diseases...we have not....we are going to die of something...intestinal infection, cancer, heart disease..
there is no getting around it.....
in the states, people with suspected Cdiff are put in a room by themselves, and hopefully people will follow isolation technique, including the familes and friends (not!) and doctors.....
C.diff does not respond to the alcohol hand washes...soap and water are now advised....
Just so they don’t reach for a tongue depressor just as they finish a prostate exam! Imagine that. :-\
Sound advice...but not really possible.
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