Infections in ICUs Plummeting, Too Many Remain in Hospitals and Dialysis Clinics
Infections in ICUs Plummeting, Too Many Remain in Hospitals and Dialysis Clinics
http://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2011/p0301_vitalsigns.html
ICUs show that preventing infections is possible; other health care settings must adopt prevention practices
From the press release
The number of bloodstream infections in intensive care unit patients with central lines decreased by 58 percent in 2009 compared to 2001, according to a new CDC Vital Signs report. During these nine years, the decrease represented up to 27,000 lives saved and $1.8 billion in excess health care costs. Bloodstream infections in patients with central lines can be deadly, killing as many as 1 in 4 patients who gets one….
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“Preventing bloodstream infections is not only possible, it should be expected. Meticulous insertion and care of the central line by all members of the clinical care team including doctors, nurses and others at the bedside is essential. The next step is to apply what we’ve learned from this to other health care settings and other health care-associated conditions, so that all patients are protected,” said Thomas R. Frieden, M.D., M.P.H., CDC director.
In addition to the ICU findings, the report found that about 60,000 bloodstream infections in patients with central lines occurred in non-ICU health care settings such as hospital wards and kidney dialysis clinics. About 23,000 of these occurred in non-ICU patients (2009) and about 37,000 infections occurred in dialysis clinics patients (2008).
“This reduction is the result of hospital, local, state and national medical and public health efforts focused on tracking infection rates and then using that information to tailor and evaluate prevention programs,” said Denise Cardo, M.D., director of CDC’s Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion. “The report findings point to a clear need for action beyond ICUs. Fortunately, we have a prevention model focused on full collaboration that can be applied broadly to maximize prevention efforts.”
Infections are one of the leading causes of hospitalization and death for hemodialysis patients. At any given time, about 350,000 people are receiving hemodialysis treatment for kidney failure. Seven in 10 patients who receive dialysis begin that treatment through a central line….
Related Articles
- Patient Safety Awareness Week 3: Positive News on Infections, More Work Needed (hcfama.org)
- Rates of Pneumonia Dramatically Reduced in Patients on Ventilators in Michigan Intensive Care Units (nlm.nih.gov)
- Challenges In Stemming The Spread Of Resistant Bacteria In Intensive Care
- Simple Cotton Swab Slashes Reduce Post-Op Infection (Medical News today, June 2011)
- Infection Risk Lurks in Hospital ICUs (webmd.com)
Patient Safety Materials at Healthy Roads Media
HealthyRoads Media contains free patient and consumer health information in a variety of formats and languages.
It has recently added a set of patient safety materials adapted from guides created by SHEA (Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America)
and partners and the development support was provided by Inova Fairfax Hospital.
The materials are in English (Spanish coming soon) and are available as handouts, web-videos and downloadable mobile videos.
- Catheter-Associated Bloodstream Infections
- Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections
- Clostridium Difficile
- MRSA
- Surgical Site Infections
- Vancomycin Resistant Enterococcus
- Ventilator Associated Pneumonia
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