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Re: Hospital infections
A hospital ward in Preston has Norovirus
http://www.lep.co.uk/news/Disease-ou...ard.3445601.jp Norovirus Introduction - Health encyclopaedia - NHS Direct This is spread by poor hygiene - again!!!!! |
Re: Hospital infections
The last thing you need to be catching when your system is low.
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Re: Hospital infections
The Hospital’s denial that anything was amiss is what bothers me. It’s something they obviously would have kept “hush hush” had they been able to control the virus.
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Re: Hospital infections
At least Lettie knows where she can go and catch it from now, she was after catching it last week.
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Re: Hospital infections
i agree with that if everyone used the alchohol for their hands when going in and out of the hospital it could help prevent it spreading MRSA.
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Re: Hospital infections
It's ironic that the doctors and nurses have to be educated in basic procedures of hygiene. I suppose that one excuse is that hospitals, particularly urgent care departments are a little overloaded. It's reassuring to know that Canadian provinces (the delivery of health care is the responsibility of provincial govt., the feds just kick in some money), and that most of them are responding to voter concerns and putting billions more into health care. (For those who are interested, Alberta would like to have about 400, 000 workers in the "skilled" areas ... this includes thousands of jobs in the health care sector ... money is great, and the Rockies are in your backyard.) I do think that we need more research into why certain strains of "bug" are becoming more resistant to drugs. I think it has a lot to do with what we eat. But that is my hobby horse ... so I won't inflict it on anyone else.
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Re: Hospital infections
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The bathroom would need a complete clean after every toilet use 24/7. The NHS wards don't have cleaners 24/7, one cleaner can be cleaning 3 different wards and obviously can't be everywhere at once. There's nothing that can be done about the bugs in the atmosphere unfortunately. If you have norovirus you often don't realise it at first and blame the sudden diarrhoea on something you ate. it is only after a few toilet trips that patients will tell the staff that there's something wrong, by which time, it's too late as it will have already spread. I see that the government are after employing 2,500 more hospital matrons in order to help control infections. This will clearly not work..... It would be more appropriate to employ 5,000 cleaners/support staff. Matrons will be constantly at meetings discussing targets, they don't do any cleaning...:rolleyes: |
Re: Hospital infections
There is now yet another bug causing hospital problems
BBC NEWS | Health look on the right side of this health page for an audio report on- Pseudomonas - hospital acquired pneumonia |
Re: Hospital infections
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Re: Hospital infections
Ambulances in the North West are not cleaned as a matter of routine. Crews are not alotted time and no cleaners are employed to do it.
BBC NEWS | Health | MRSA 'risk' from dirty ambulances extract-- Ambulance crews questioned by the union said targets, time and money were all to blame for different cleaning practices between trusts. In the worst example, ambulance crews in the North West have no dedicated cleaning staff or cleaning time. |
Re: Hospital infections
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The death rate from C difficile is up - partly due to it being put on the death certificates as an underlying cause of death, whereas before, docs sometimes omitted it.
The true size of the problem is now coming to light. Todays BBC News- BBC NEWS | Health | Dramatic rise in C. diff deaths |
Re: Hospital infections
Don't know about any body else but not being in great health myself, this problem sure scares the hell out of me, it will have to be something very very serious before i'll let them admit me into hospital. 2 years ago a mate, who I actually met when I was an inpatient at QP about 17 years ago was admited with a very bad chest complaint, he got MRSA nd that was the end for him, now you realise why i'm so scared
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Re: Hospital infections
Red tape preventing Conquest from cutting hospital bugs - Hastings Today - Back to Home Page extract-
A recent study in the medical publication The Lancet showed 40 per cent of C diff infections are spread by hospital bed linen and gowns worn by patients. Scientists have proved that standard laundry systems do not kill C diff and that it can be returned to hospital beds on apparently bug free sheets and blankets. There is a laundry system which kills C Diff - it is called Otex, and kills the bug with ozone But guidelines from the Department of Health, which are based on a piece of legislation from 1969, means the laundry system, called Otex, can only be used on mops and not sheets or other bed linen. OTEX - Validated Ozone Disinfection Beaurocracy dictates that higher temperatures than those acheived by the Otex system must be used on hospital linen----- so they can only kill C Diff on mops :rolleyes: |
Re: Hospital infections
dont let it bother me, cos i'm never out of the damn places, was in on tuesday n twice last year, so i take the view if theres owt wrong with me-get it sorted, MRSA n such aint a factor- its when the boss pulls yer clockcard.;)
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Re: Hospital infections
This is something that has been going on for years.
My mum died 10 years ago after a routine operation. She got an infection and died a week later,at the same time another woman on the same ward had a similar operation and also died from an infection. I'm personally scared that i will be ill enough someday that i need hospital treatment,You never know what state you will come back in if at all. |
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