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Jun 12 2008, 10:39 AM
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![]() "The Sleeper must awaken" ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Activist Posts: 1,783 Joined: 2-February 08 From: Ohio, America, Earth, Universe Member No.: 6,365 |
Hospitals are very dangerous places.
Plagues, Pestilences and Diseases http://jahtruth.net/signs.htm Superbug kills eight patients at same hospital By Auslan Cramb, Scottish Correspondent Last Updated: 10:05PM BST 11/06/2008 A virulent "superbug" has killed eight patients at the same hospital in the past six months. An investigation into cases at the Vale of Leven Hospital in Alexandria found that eight of the 54 patients who contracted Clostridium difficile, or C. diff, had died as a direct result. The infection was a contributory factor in a further eight deaths and a review of hygiene procedures and the use of antibiotics - which can harm the body's defences against infection - is now underway. A further six patients who contracted C. diff later died although the infection was not responsible. The investigation by NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde revealed that of the 54 patients treated for the superbug, 13 had it when they were admitted to the hospital. It launched the inquiry in May amid fears that the infection had been passed between the Vale of Leven Hospital and the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Paisley. Dr Syed Ahmed, of the outbreak control team, said: "The overall number of C. diff cases within the six-month period is higher on average than we would expect, but we are particularly concerned about the number of deaths due to this infection. "This may not be due to any specific strain of C. diff but more to do with the type of patients treated at the Vale of Leven which has a high proportion of elderly patients who are more likely to develop symptoms of the infection. "Older people have a far greater natural occurrence of C. diff. One in five older people carry the bug in their gut compared to only one in fifty young adults." Ross Finnie, the Lib Dem health spokesman, said the death of eight patients suggested a "complete failure" by the health board to keep on top of virus control. The hospital is to be given improved hand washing facilities, with greater emphasis placed on hygiene protocols. The latest techniques for treating and managing C. diff will also be introduced. Prof John Coia, director of the National C. diff Reference Service, said one of the most significant measures taken would involve chanign the way antibiotics were used. He added: "Recent reports from elsewhere in the UK and North America show that significant reductions in C. diff rates can be achieved when this measure is used to supplement existing infection control techniques." There are currently only three patients in the hospital with the infection and all are being treated in isolation, the health board said. C. diff is a bacterium that causes diarrhoea and more serious intestinal conditions such as colitis. -------------------- |
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