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Saturday, February 2, 2008

If he'd give me a few good years, I'd work on hospital-acquired infections

Bill Percival of Greenville, South Carolina picked up five staph infections while in a hospital for cancer treatment. As he clung to life, he made himself a promise.

"I told my doctor that if he would give me a few good years, I'd spend them working on hospital-acquired infections," said the 64-year-old retiree.

He kept his word. Since his recovery, he has spent the past few months attending meetings of a group overseeing the reporting of such infections.

On Friday, the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control released its first report showing rates at hospitals around the state for two types of infections — those associated with the placing of a catheter deep into major blood vessels, and those associated with surgical sites. In this first report, the latter category includes only heart-bypass surgeries and hysterectomies.

DHEC will collect more data and will issue another report later this year. Other procedures will be added to the reports over time so the public can have an idea of how a hospital is doing overall.

"In the long run, we hope that we get the reports to the point that they are a useful guide to healthcare consumers so that you can look and see where you're more likely to be safe if you have to go in a hospital," said S.C. consumer advocate John Ruoff, who lobbied for the infection-reporting legislation.

"People need to be knowledgeable about this, and if these reports can increase public awareness of the danger of health care-associated infections, antibiotic-resistant infections in hospitals and in the community, that is a big help," said Helen Haskell, who helped form Mothers Against Medical Error after her son died in a hospital.

Sen. Ralph Anderson, D-Greenville, lead sponsor of the infection-reporting bill, said the requirement will get hospitals to work harder to lower infections.

Dr. Shawn Stinson, who is in charge of clinical quality and patient safety at Palmetto Health, said, "I have kids, and if they get sick and end up in somebody else's hospital, I want zero."

Advice: Join the efforts of citizens in many other states to file and pass state legislation to require the reporting of hospital-acquired infections.


Browse for related stories in the index at the very bottom of this page, or see a short video of one person’s hospital infection story.

Thanks to Czerne Reid for the source story in today's South Carolina state.com.

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