California bill would require reporting
of 'superbug' infections, deaths
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[December 06, 2016]
By Yasmeen Abutaleb
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A California
state senator introduced a bill on Monday that would mandate reporting
of antibiotic-resistant infections and deaths and require doctors to
record the infections on death certificates when they are a cause of
death.
The legislation also aims to establish the nation’s most comprehensive
statewide surveillance system to track infections and deaths from
drug-resistant pathogens. Data from death certificates would be used to
help compile an annual state report on superbug infections and related
deaths.
In September, a Reuters investigation revealed that tens of thousands of
superbug deaths nationwide go uncounted every year. The infections are
often omitted from death certificates, and even when they are recorded,
they aren’t counted because of the lack of a unified national
surveillance system.
“The (Reuters) story highlighted some of the problems that have come
from the lack of information, the lack of reporting, especially deaths,”
said state Senator Jerry Hill, who introduced the bill. “I wasn’t aware
that on death certificates, antibiotic-resistant infections have never
been called out.”
Because there is no federal surveillance system, monitoring of superbug
infections and deaths falls to the states. A Reuters survey of all 50
state health departments and the District of Columbia found that
reporting requirements vary widely.
California is among the states that do not require reporting of
superbug-related deaths. A Reuters analysis of death certificates from
2003 to 2014 identified more than 20,000 deaths linked to the infections
in California, the most of any state – and probably an undercount, given
the unreliability of death certificate data.
Hill’s bill would require hospitals and clinical labs to submit an
annual summary of antibiotic-resistant infections to the California
Department of Health beginning July 1, 2018; amend a law governing death
certificates by requiring that doctors specify on death certificates
when a superbug was the leading or a contributing cause of death; and
require the state Health Department to publish an annual report on
resistant infections and deaths, including data culled from death
certificates.
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This digitally-colorized scanning electron micrograph depicts four
magenta-colored, spherical methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA) bacteria in the process of being phagocytized by a
blue-colored human white blood cells in this undated handout photo.
Handout via REUTERS
Hill introduced legislation in 2014 that would require reporting of
superbug infections - not deaths. It was ultimately stripped down to
mandate that all hospitals in California implement “stewardship”
programs to prevent the overprescription of antibiotics that promotes
drug resistance. Hill said the state medical association and other
physician groups opposed the initial proposal.
The 2014 legislation followed a 2013 threat report from the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, which estimated that at least 23,000
people in the U.S. die every year from antibiotic-resistant infections.
A Reuters analysis of the agency’s math found that the numbers are based
on such small sample sizes that they are mostly guesswork.
Hill has written several superbug-related bills that have been signed
into law in recent years. Those include laws that regulate antibiotic
use in livestock and others that mandate antibiotic stewardship programs
in nursing homes and other healthcare facilities.
“We don’t know how (superbugs) affect California,” Hill said. “We could
be overreacting in certain areas or underreacting in areas that could
create real problems for people.”
(Edited by John Blanton)
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