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		 U.S. 
		lawmaker seeks congressional hearing on ‘superbug’ outbreak 
		
		 
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		[February 24, 2015] 
		By Dan Whitcomb 
		  
		 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A U.S. lawmaker on 
		Monday called on the Congress to investigate the medical scopes blamed 
		for an outbreak of a bacterial "superbug" at a University of California, 
		Los Angeles hospital that has infected seven patients. 
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            Representative Ted Lieu, a Democrat from California, said in a 
			letter asking for a congressional oversight committee hearing that 
			the outbreak of the drug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, or CRE, 
			bacteria posed "both health and national security" risks. 
			 
			"If unmitigated, the human and societal costs of CRE outbreaks will 
			continue to rise," Lieu wrote in the letter. 
			 
			"A superbug infection can kill not only the patient who was exposed 
			to a tainted duodenoscope but also family members, friends and 
			hospital staff who interacted with the patient," he said. 
			 
			Officials say the duodenoscopes, which are inserted down a patient's 
			throat during gastrointestinal procedures, spread the 
			antibiotic-resistant bacteria to seven patients at the UCLA Ronald 
			Reagan Medical Center, contributing to two deaths. The other five 
			are under treatment. 
			 
			An additional 179 people who had endoscopies at the large teaching 
			hospital may have been exposed to the potentially fatal pathogens, 
			according to UCLA. 
			 
			On Friday, a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
			scientist said the agency was close to unveiling a detailed 
			procedure designed to prevent the scopes from spreading the 
			superbug. 
			 
			Called a "surveillance culture," the procedure involves swabbing the 
			device after it has been disinfected and then allowing any microbes 
			to grow into detectable colonies, much as doctors take throat swabs 
			to determine if a patient has a strep infection. 
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			The UCLA medical center has said it had been sterilizing the 
			duodenoscopes implicated in the infection according to manufacturer 
			standards. It has said it now uses a more rigorous process that 
			exceeds national standards. 
			 
			Hospitals across the United States have reported exposures from the 
			same type of medical equipment in recent years. The U.S. Food and 
			Drug Administration has said it was working with other government 
			agencies and scope manufacturers to minimize risks to patients. 
			 
			(Story has been refiled to correct typographical error in headline) 
			 
			(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Mohammad Zargham) 
			
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