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by anygunanywhere
Sun Apr 02, 2006 7:53 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: Statistically speaking (humor?)
Replies: 12
Views: 1791

Physicians Are Not The Only Problem

Going to the hospital is downright dangerous. Mrs. Anygun is a staff RN at a local hospital and has spoken of this very issue.

As a society, our priorities are wrong.

http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/story?secti ... id=4039258

90,000 Americans die from hospital infections each year

(3/30/06) - When he entered the hospital in February 2004, Mark Bennett was a vibrant 88-year-old with little more than a bad cough. Within a few days, his leg had swelled and become discolored. Within four months, he was dead.

It turns out that hospital personnel had passed on at least six different bacterial infections, inducing drug-resistant strains, to Bennett, according to his son, Michael Bennett.

"This was passed to him through negligence, and he died because of it," Bennett said. "He was gentle, yet strong, just a great human being."

Each year, more than 2 million people in the United States acquire an infection during a hospital stay, and an estimated 90,000 people die from them -- more than from AIDS, breast cancer and auto accidents combined.

"If 110 people were dying daily from the bird flu, I think we'd be calling this an epidemic," said Marc Volavaka of the Pennsylvania Health Cost Containment Council.

The danger is growing worse because many hospital-acquired infections can no longer be treated with traditional antibiotics. Experts, however, say these infections are almost always preventable.

"Infections are spread on the hands and gloves of health-care workers, on their labs and uniforms, on stethoscopes and blood pressure cuffs and bedrails," said Betsy McCaughey of the Committee to Reduce Infections.

There is more of the story at the link.

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