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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Bloomberg reported that Londoners are suffering a summer wave of influenza worse than in the last winter flu season after the H1N1 virus caused the rate of illness to quadruple last week.

 The World Health Organization said the pandemic virus has infected over 77,000 people in more than 90 countries, killing over 330 of them, since its discovery in Mexico and the U.S. in April

Flu typically peaks in England in January. The college’s flu surveillance network reported that last week’s rate was about four times higher than the 10-year average for summer.

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 Londoners Suffer Summer of Winter Bug as Swine Flu Cases Mount