Monday, March 19, 2007 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
Editorial
Hospitals, heal thyselves
One doesn't think of hospitals as places that cause illness, but hospital-acquired infections are one of the leading causes of patient deaths.
The state Legislature is right to demand hospitals begin reporting their infection rates, an effort intended to spur corrective measures. A bill passed by the state House and now in the Senate would require hospitals to start reporting to the state July 2008 the rates of bloodstream infections in patients on central lines. The state Department of Health would gradually include other infections, including ventilator-associated pneumonia and infected surgical incisions.
This is a plan worth placing on a fast track.
Nationwide, 2 million patients suffer needlessly after getting an infection in the hospital. The Centers for Disease Control estimates 90,000 of them die. Preventable deaths, of which hospital-acquired infections is a part, eat up $17 to $29 billion a year.
Hospitals have improved, placing plastic gloves and anti-bacterial wash at hand, but they have a long way to go toward cleaning up their act. The key to preventing hospital-acquired infections is basic cleanliness: hands washed between patients, sterile equipment, clean rooms.
Hospitals must do a better job of monitoring invasive lines that go into patients, such as catheters, intravenous tubes and central lines. These are entry points for deadly bacteria.
A way to compel hospitals is through public reporting. Consumers have a right to know which hospitals are improving their infection rates and which aren't.
Regular reporting encourages a thoughtful surveillance missing from hospital's current practice of self-monitoring. Knowing the public is watching is likely to stimulate more effort to control and prevent hospital-acquired infections.
Data submitted by hospitals would help national efforts as well. Infection rates from the CDC and other agencies are out of date, caused in large part by the fact that only 14 states require hospitals to report infections.
This isn't a complex problem in search of high-tech or expensive solutions. This is Hygiene 101.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
![]()

nwjobs

Post a comment

Michelle Goodman blogs about work/life balance.
How to tell your office you're gravely ill
Post a comment
nwautos

Choosing a new car? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment
- 'The Road' takes Viggo Mortensen to Mount St. Helens and Astoria, Ore.
- Tugboat sinks at Seattle waterfront pier
- Child-support error costs nearly $21,000
- Craigslist adoption ad: A plea by young mother-to-be? A scam?
- Chase shrugs off loss of CD investors
- Vikings easily beat the Seahawks
- Denny Triangle gains skyline, but tenants slow to come
- Snow piles up on Cascade slopes
- Woman stabbed by stranger in North Seattle
- Husky Men's Basketball Blog | Saturday's Pac-10 games in review
- Vikings easily beat the Seahawks
134 - Child-support error costs nearly $21,000
129 - Palin excitement builds in Tri-Cities
123 - Tight Senate vote launches health care over hurdle
122 - Cutting through breast-cancer confusion
90 - Prosecutor requests life in prison for Amanda Knox
89 - Historic health care bill clears Senate hurdle
84 - Game thread
70 - New York terror trials will restore faith in rule of law
64 - Chase shrugs off loss of CD investors
54
- 'The Road' takes Viggo Mortensen to Mount St. Helens and Astoria, Ore.
- Child-support error costs nearly $21,000
- It's possible to recover a life lost to hoarding
- Washington state wines make annual best-of list
- Banff: powder, peaks & purity
- Chase shrugs off loss of CD investors
- Protect yourself from baggage loss
- Denny Triangle gains skyline, but tenants slow to come
- Northwest Living | On Whidbey, a unified home from multiple recycled parts
- Rediscovering Moab, 'the most beautiful place on Earth'




