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			Illinois combats antibiotic resistance 
			Investigation of 
			cluster of antibiotic-resistant bacteria highlighted 
			
   
            
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            [January 06, 2014] 
            SPRINGFIELD — The Illinois 
			Department of Public Health is instituting innovative health 
			care-associated infection prevention programs and is a national 
			leader in the control of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, or 
			CRE, infections, which usually occur in hospital and nursing home 
			patients and can be extremely difficult to treat. 
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			 This expertise proved valuable when patients were exposed to CRE 
			while undergoing a specialized endoscopic procedure at Advocate 
			Lutheran Hospital. The incident is included in last week's Centers 
			for Disease Control and Prevention Morbidity and Mortality Weekly 
			Report."IDPH, the Cook County Department of Public Health, the 
			CDC and Advocate Lutheran Hospital worked together as an 
			investigative team to identify CRE infections and discover the 
			source of the outbreak," said IDPH Director LaMar Hasbrouck. "It is 
			this type of coordinated effort that is vital to stopping CRE 
			infections from spreading." 
			
			  
			Enterobacteriaceae are a family of more than 70 bacteria, 
			including E. coli, that normally live in the digestive system. Some 
			of these bacteria have become resistant to most antibiotics, 
			including a group of antibiotics known as carbapenems, often 
			referred to as "last-resort" antibiotics. The bacteria can kill up 
			to half of patients who get CRE bloodstream infections. In addition 
			to spreading among patients, often on the hands of health care 
			personnel, CRE bacteria can transfer their resistance to other 
			bacteria.  
			IDPH has been working for years to identify and stop the spread 
			of antibiotic-resistant organisms.  
			
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In 2012, IDPH 
				engaged 254 hospitals and long-term care facilities in the 
				Illinois Collaborative to eliminate Clostridium difficile 
				infections, a common cause of bacterial diarrhea in hospitalized 
				patients.  
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In November 2013, 
				IDPH began using an Extensively Drug-Resistant Organism Registry 
				to track CRE and improve communication among health care 
				facilities caring for patients with CRE infections.   
			 
			
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Currently, 
					IDPH is forming a task force with nationally recognized CRE 
					experts, including representatives from the CDC-funded 
					Prevention Epicenter in Chicago.   
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In 2014, IDPH will run a statewide 
					collaborative on antibiotic stewardship to support practices 
					aimed at responsible antibiotic use.   
			 
			Information on hospital infection rates can be found in the 
			Illinois Hospital Report Card and Consumer Guide to Health Care at
			
			http://www.healthcarereportcard.illinois.gov/. 
			Raising awareness of disease outbreaks is important to help 
			prevent the spread of illness. Such communications are one of the 
			Illinois Department of Public Health's priorities outlined in its 
			five-year strategy for 2014-2018. For a copy of the strategic plan, 
			visit
			
			http://www.idph.state.il.us/about/ 
			StrategicPlan_Final_2014-2018.pdf. 
			
            [Text from 
			Illinois Department of Public 
			Health file received from the
			
			Illinois Office of Communication and Information] 
            
			  
            
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