Are Hospitals Doing Enough to Prevent C. difficile Infections? - April 14, 2016

Clostridium difficile (C. diff) is one of the most common healthcare associated infections (HCAIs) in the United States, causing an estimated 100,000 infections yearly. C. diff is a bacterium that causes colitis and can infect people through direct contact with items or surfaces contaminated with the bacteria. Individuals that have existing illnesses or conditions with prolonged use of antibiotics are at a greater risk of the disease. However, healthcare workers can also spread the bacteria to patients or contaminate surfaces through contact (CDC). 

According to Infection Control Today, a study presented by the University of Michigan's Medical School and VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System in Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology reports that "nearly half of American hospitals aren't taking key steps to prevent a kind of gut infection that kills nearly 30,000 people annually and sickens hundreds of thousands more." Although all hospitals have to monitor for C. diff infections, a lack of antibiotic-limiting efforts are a main concern in infection control. The article states, "more than 60 percent of hospitalized patients receive antibiotics -- and as much as 50 percent of that antibiotic use may be inappropriate." With an increase and overuse, simply using antibiotics in these conditions is cause for antibiotic resistance in C. diff because it causes a lack of normal intestinal bacteria. This allows for the hard to treat bacteria to cause severe and life threatening infections. 

In addition, another study presented by Premier, Inc in the American Journal of Infection Control presents a study where C. diff increases hospital costs by 40 percent per case and "puts those infected at high risk for longer hospital stays and readmission".

Since C. diff spores can persist in hospital environments for weeks, preventative steps in infection control should be a top priority. UVC Cleaning Systems offers products that provide a 99.9% kill rate of Clostridium difficile and can help in the fight against the number one healthcare associated infection!

Equipping the EVS toolbox September 16, 2016

In the past decade, the number of multi-drug resistant pathogens have increased, yet many environmental service professionals methods of cleaning have remained stagnant. EVS professionals are well aware of the risk of

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Back to School: Outbreaks! August 19, 2016

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Medicare's Readmission Penalties Hit New High

Medicare measures the readmission rates of seven conditions: heart attacks, heart failure, pneumonia, chronic lung disease, hip and knee replacements and coronary artery bypass graft surgery. Fines are determined by comparing current rates to...

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Norovirus strikes at the RNC in Cleveland OH

The Ohio department of health was notified on Monday 7/18/16 about the outbreak of Norovirus among staffers at the Republican National Convention. All of those affected are staying at the Kalahari resort in Sandusky, Oh, about 60 miles away from...
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