Eliminating HAIs

Author: K.Meadows  October 12, 2010

APIC.org has laid up the framework on how to eliminate Hospital Associated Infections.

Four main points are:
Implement evidence-based practices that protect patients;

Align incentives to promote system-wide strategies for HAI prevention;

Address gaps in knowledge to push beyond the current medical knowledge; and

Collect data to target prevention efforts and to measure progress.

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Together we can knock out HAIs and make the world a healthier place.


The AHA wrote in a letter to the OSHA that the current standards are complete enough not to be updated.

This article is from AHANews.com:

“No need for additional infection-control standard, AHA tells OSHA

August 04, 2010
Hospitals have effective and comprehensive programs in place that integrate the need to protect patients and health care personnel from infectious diseases, and there is no need for an additional standard, the AHA said today in a letter to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. “The existing infection prevention and control standards, including their assessment and enforcement by regulatory, accrediting and certifying bodies, have proven to be functional and appropriate, and substantial resources are dedicated to their regular maintenance and improvement,” AHA wrote, responding to OSHA’s request for public comments on the issue of occupational exposure to infectious agents in health care settings. Hospitals follow Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines and recommendations for protecting caregivers and patients from infectious disease, which are enforced by hospital accrediting and certifying bodies such as The Joint Commission and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. “In order to justify a new standard, OSHA must demonstrate that these comprehensive and stringently enforced programs are insufficient, and that gaps in the existing programs have led to measurable increases in occupationally acquired infections,” AHA said.”

Big news from the AHA.

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The Latest News On Swine Flu Outbreaks In Schools

Author: HenryMorewasd  August 24, 2009

Flu Strategists See Schools on Front

Line-

Children Key to Infection-Prevention Dynamic

Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, August 24, 2009

One of the main battlegrounds in the fight against an expected resurgence of swine flu this fall will be the schoolyard, a place where the disease could, well, go viral.

People between 6 months and 24 years old appear to be particularly vulnerable to the swine flu virus, known as H1N1. And there are several reasons to think that schools could be hotbeds of infection:
Large groups of children and young adults? Check.In close proximity? Check.Lax sanitary standards? Check.

And with schools expected to remain open unless the virus becomes more severe, there’s little standing in the way of H1N1′s spread.

At the same time, schools are likely to serve as centers for mass immunizations, which could sharply reduce H1N1′s reach, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and state and local authorities. So far, the swine flu does not appear to be more dangerous than the typical seasonal flu. But medical authorities are concerned that it could infect many more people — thereby increasing the potential number of deaths — because so few people have immunity against it.

The mass immunization program, likely to be the largest of its kind since the polio vaccine was given to about 100 million Americans in the 1960s, will play out with some differences between states and local jurisdictions. For instance, still waiting to be resolved are questions about who gets the vaccine, whether schools are used as vaccination sites, whether parents are present when children are vaccinated and whether the vaccine is administered by injection or nasal spray.

Health officials in Virginia, Maryland and the District said that at least some school campuses will be used as vaccination sites. Schools reopen today in the District and in parts of suburban Maryland.

“There’s considerable interest out there from the local health departments and school districts to do it in the schools,” said Jim Farrell, director of the immunization division of the Virginia Department of Health.

Elsewhere, officials suspect that schools will be used less.

“Our school health system . . . is not very well-funded,” said David Fleming, public health director and health officer for Seattle and King County, Wash. “We don’t have the staff in the schools to do it. There’s also the cumbersome process of getting parental permission. So doing it during school hours may not make a lot of sense.”

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