“One small water line feeding one hospital faucet alone can house millions of bacteria,” said international Legionella expert Janet Stout, Ph.D., urging public health and infection control officers to be proactive against Legionella and other waterborne microbes that contribute to soaring hospital infection rates.
Communities of waterborne pathogens, known as biofilm, can line every pipe in every water distribution system of every hospital, making their way into faucets, ice machines and showers, where the water may infect patients, says eurekalert press release . In the December 2007 issue of Managing Infection Control, Dr. Stout, Director of the Special Pathogens Laboratory and Associate Professor at the University of Pittsburgh, offers a prescription for prevention and remediation.
Infections acquired in healthcare settings are not confined to hospitals. Nursing homes, rehabilitation centers and other long-term care facilities are equally vulnerable. In the article, “Understanding and Controlling Waterborne Pathogens: Applying Lessons Learned from Legionella,” Dr. Stout notes: “Those most at risk from these unseen microbes are the people who are owed a higher level of care” – premature infants and newborns, the elderly, people undergoing cancer treatment or with compromised immune systems, transplant recipients and patients in Intensive Care Units (ICUs).
Courtesy:thehindu.com
Complete artical HERE
Friday, December 21, 2007
Making hospitals safer from infection
Labels: Science and Tech
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