37,000 U.S.
infection-related deaths preventable over five years:
CDC
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[August 05, 2015]
By Ransdell Pierson
(Reuters) - Closer coordination between
healthcare facilities and public health departments could save 37,000
U.S. lives over five years by preventing infections from
antibiotic-resistant germs and from a nasty intestinal bug called C.
difficile, according to a government report released on Tuesday.
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Germs that no longer respond to antibiotics cause more than 2
million illnesses and 23,000 deaths each year in the United States,
according to the report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. Such superbugs typically arise when antibiotics are
overprescribed.
Spores from C. difficile bacteria, which spread readily in hospitals
and nursing homes and cause severe diarrhea, account for almost
another 500,000 illnesses and 15,000 deaths annually. Rigorous
cleaning of rooms with bleach can kill the spores, and hand-washing
can also help prevent their spread.
C. difficile and drug-resistant bacteria, including carbapenem-resistant
Enterobacteria (CRE) and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA), spread inside health care facilities when infection control
measures are inadequate and notably when patients move from one
facility to another, the CDC said.
The report said 619,000 antibiotic-resistant and C. difficile
infections and 37,000 deaths could be averted over five years if
there was better control, or stewardship, of antibiotic use and
tighter coordination between health departments and health care
facilities.
That could take the form of health agencies notifying hospitals and
nursing homes of drug-resistant germ outbreaks in the community and
the threat of germs coming from other facilities. Likewise, health
care facilities and health departments should agree to implement
shared infection control actions, the CDC said.
"Facilities that work alone cannot adequately protect their
patients," CDC Director Tom Frieden said in a conference call with
reporters. "Tens of thousands of deaths can be prevented" with
tighter coordination.
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For instance, he said a hospital transporting an infected patient to
another hospital or nursing home could alert the receiving facility.
Then, the arriving patient could be isolated and receiving staff
could wear protective gowns and gloves to prevent spread of
infection.
In addition, once a hospital is known to have an exceptional number
of patients infected with C. diff or drug-resistant bacteria,
diagnostic tests could be used to determine whether other patients
there are asymptomatic carriers.
Based on available research data, the CDC estimated that tighter
coordination could slash infections with CRE as much as 80 percent
in a given area over five years.
(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson; Editing by David Gregorio)
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