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| Hospital-acquired infections are a hidden epidemic |
By definition, hospitals are supposed to boost our health. But they often do quite the opposite. An estimated 2 million Americans annually acquire infections in hospitals, and 90,000 of them die -- twice the number of those who die in all traffic accidents. In fact, more people die from hospital-acquired infections than die from traffic accidents, AIDS and breast cancer combined. Such deadly infections are often due to negligent or careless behavior by health-care personnel. Yet for many years such personnel claimed they were merely being "human" and that patients were subject to an inevitable statistical possibility for infection in a hospital. MRSA infection rate can be trackedToday, the "inevitable risk" shield for hospitals is evaporating. Research shows that almost all hospital-acquired infections are preventable. Besides, try telling a mother of three whose husband dies from a hospital-acquired infection that it was simply a statistical probability. When an infection is preventable, no excuse is good enough. It would help if the public knew which hospitals and which treatments bore the most risk of infection. And such help is on the way. Due to the spread in hospitals of "superbugs" such as MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus), many states are passing laws which require hospitals to report their infection rates for various ailments. In recent years, 26 of the nation's states have passed laws requiring that infection rates be reported, including Texas in 2007. Yet infection rates in Texas still haven't been made public, because the Texas Legislature still hasn't funded the reporting system. And in many other states, such reports are made solely to the state but are not made public. Hand-washing would prevent many deathsMeanwhile, between 130,000 and 160,000 Texans each year suffer health-care related infections, which also can come from pediatric hospitals, home care and ambulatory surgical centers, reports the state health department. Often such infections spread due to care givers' failure to follow simple, basic precautions such as washing their hands before and after a procedure. In fact, the CDC believes that half of infections could be avoided simply by care givers cleaning their hands before they touch a patient. Litigation increases for hospital infectionsWithout relentless adherence to such precautions, the slightest touch between a health-care provider and a patient can infect the patient with deadly bacteria. That's why groups such as the non-profit Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths (RID) have been formed. It's also why Medicare recently announced it no longer will pay hospitals to treat preventable infections acquired in a hospital, while barring hospitals from billing patients for what Medicare won't pay. And it's also why litigation is increasing in this realm. DISCLAIMER: Though licensed to practice law in Texas, Jim S. Adler & Associates, with principal offices at 3D/International Tower, 1900 West Loop South, 20th Floor, Houston, Texas 77027, also works as necessary with local and outside counsel to litigate claims in other states, including: Alabama | Alaska | Arizona | Arkansas | California | Colorado | Connecticut | Delaware | Florida | Georgia | Hawaii | Idaho | Illinois | Indiana | Iowa | Kansas | Kentucky | Louisiana | Maine | Maryland | Massachusetts | Michigan | Minnesota | Mississippi | Missouri | Montana | Nebraska | Nevada | New Hampshire | New Jersey | New Mexico | New York | North Carolina | North Dakota | Ohio | Oklahoma | Oregon | Pennsylvania | Rhode Island | South Carolina | South Dakota | Tennessee | Utah | Vermont | Virginia | Washington | West Virginia | Wisconsin | Wyoming Jim S. Adler & Associates has more offices at City Place Building, 2711 North Haskell Ave., Suite 2100 LB40, Dallas, Texas 75204-2887; Bank of America, 12605 East Freeway, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77015-5619 (serving Channelview, Texas); and San Pedro Plaza, 7330 San Pedro Ave., Suite 700, San Antonio, Texas 78216-6237.
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By definition, hospitals are supposed to boost our health. But they often do quite the opposite. An estimated 2 million Americans annually acquire infections in hospitals, and 90,000 of them die -- twice the number of those who die in all traffic accidents. In fact, more people die from hospital-acquired infections than die from traffic accidents, AIDS and breast cancer combined.