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News - St John~s Rehabilitation Hospital, Toronto Ontario Canada |
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St John~s Rehabilitation Hospital |
Milestone for hospital ICU team |
Date : - 11/05/2012 |
Clinicians at Hawke's Bay Hospital's Intensive Care Unit (ICU) are among the first in the country to have eliminated hospital-acquired intensive care bloodstream infections in their patients for a year.
Intensive Care specialist Ross Freebairn said a year without a patient having a bloodstream infection, associated with a catheter in a large vein, was a significant milestone.
Patients who were admitted to ICU were extremely sick and many critically, Dr Freebairn said.
"More than half the patients in our ICU will need a central vein catheter," he said.
"Getting a bloodstream infection from a central vein catheter, known as central line associated bacteriaemia, not only increases hospital length of stay and costs up to $50,000 per patient, but also carries an additional significant mortality."
Avoiding complications such as serious infections improved patient care and health quality while at the same time reduced costs.
"A motivated and clinically focused team can deliver real health benefits to our sickest patients," Dr Freebairn said.
"This cannot be achieved without a combination of both high-quality, dedicated nursing staff and specialised medical expertise. We need to improve efficiency without compromising patient care. Preventing unnecessary infections is one way to do both."
Dr Freebairn said antibiotic resistance was also a significant clinical risk and cost to Intensive Care services.
"We need to avoid unnecessary antibiotic use by preventing infections," he said.
"Excessive antibiotic use will not only increase pharmacy costs but will also fuel future antibiotic resistance. This is something we simply cannot afford."
Dr Michael Park and associate clinical nurse manager Anne Stuart lead Hawke's Bay ICU as part of the national ICU plan to prevent central line associated bacteriaemia
The project was supported by the Health Quality and Safety Commission New Zealand and is one of the first projects to improve work between all New Zealand intensive care units. |
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Reference : - www.hawkesbaytoday.co.nz/news/milestone-for-hospital-icu-team/1376869/0 |
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