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15 Steps to Protect Yourself


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Video Clips

Forbes Magazine

February 25, 2008 Patients at Risk

Forbes Magazine

February 21, 2008 Dirty Hospitals

ABC News
'Superbug infections on rise'
Betsy McCaughey speaks with Dr. Tim Johnson on ABC News


ABC News
Dr. McCaughey advocates universal screening on Good Morning America

WNBC
WNBC Top Story: Patients Can Help Stop Hospital-Acquired Infections
(September 2006
)

NBC Dateline
RID Chairman, Betsy McCaughey gives lifesaving advice on Dateline NBC
(June 2006)


NBC Nightly News
RID featured on NBC Nightly News
(June 2006)


Nightline
RID on Nightline,
ABC News
(March 2006)


ABC News
RID Featured on Good Morning America, ABC News

Twenty Twenty, ABC News
RID featured on 20/20, ABC News. Myth #1, Hospitals keep you safe from germs

Radio Shows

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RID's Radio Ad
Click to listen or right-click on link to download.

Voice of America
Betsy McCaughey
on Voice of America,
(December 2005)

Click to listen or right-click on link to download.

MP3

Listen to Betsy
McCaughey on the radio, (August 2005)
Click to listen or right-click on link to download.
MP3
 

RID's Model Hospital Infection Report Card Bill

Note: For additional information and footnotes, please see the 2nd edition of RID's popular publication, Unnecessary Deaths: The Human and Financial Costs of Hospital Infections

Fortunately, 30 states are considering legislation to provide the public with the information they need. These states should use the model bill suggested here (Appendix A), because it improves upon the laws already passed in three ways: First, it specifies the method of risk-adjustment for surgical site infections used by the CDC, rather than leaving the risk-adjustment method to be determined by committee. This should assure hospitals that comparisons will be fair and take into account which hospitals treat especially sick and infection-prone patients.

Secondly, the bill imposes civil penalties on hospitals that fail to report or flagrantly underreport their infections. These penalties are needed. For many years, some hospitals have openly ignored data collection laws with impunity. For example, in one recent year, hospitals in New York reported only 16.5 percent of the post-surgical deaths that the law required them to report.41 In 2005, the first year of Pennsylvania's hospital infection reporting program, hospitals reported only one tenth as many infections to the new program as they billed. Some Pennsylvania hospitals implausibly claimed they had no infections at all.

Thirdly, the model bill ensures that hospital infection reporting will benefit the public, not enrich trial lawyers. The bill provides that "none of the data collected and reported under this law can be used in litigation against an individual hospital."

Next time you hear an ad on the radio urging you to use a particular hospital because it has the best doctors or the latest equipment, keep in mind what you're not being told: how many patients get infections while in that hospital. Hospitals are doing their best to keep that information secret. In contrast, in England hospital infection rates are posted conspicuously on the front door of the hospital. Americans deserve the same information. The legislation proposed here won't help hospitals save face, but it will help you choose a safe hospital. Let hospitals vie for your business by improving their infection rates.

__________________

The following outline is intended to help state lawmakers as they draft legislation to provide the public with hospital infection rates: AN ACT to provide the public with information on infection rates at hospitals in the state of _____________.

Section 1. Definitions.

(a) The public health law is amended to add a new section (lawmakers here should include the specific title of the public health or health department law to be amended).

(b) "Hospital" shall mean (lawmakers here should consider whether to include only acute care hospitals or also free-standing outpatient surgical centers).

(c) "Hospital-acquired infection" shall mean, as defined by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), "any localized or systemic condition resulting from an adverse reaction to the presence of an infectious agent(s) or its toxin(s) that (a) occurs in a patient in a hospital, (b) and was found not to be present or incubating at the time of admission to the hospital, unless (c) the infection was related to a previous admission to the same hospital."

(d) "Risk adjustment" shall mean a statistical procedure for comparing patient outcomes, taking into account the differences in patient populations, including risk factors such as the number of patients on central line catheters, or the number of patients undergoing specific types of surgery, as a percentage of the overall number of patients treated. For purposes of this bill, risk adjustment shall duplicate the CDC’s NNIS System surgical wound infection risk index or use the number of central-catheter days as a risk-adjustment factor for central line infections.

Section 2.

(a) Using established public health surveillance methods, each hospital shall maintain a program of identifying and tracking the following types of hospitalacquired infections for the purpose of reporting such data semi-annually to the state health department (lawmakers insert the appropriate state department here): central line-associated, laboratory confirmed primary bloodstream infections contracted by intensive care unit patients, and surgical site infections.

(b) The state health department (lawmakers insert the appropriate department name here) shall establish an advisory committee that includes recognized experts in the field of hospital-acquired infection, public reporting of hospital data, and health care quality management to establish data collection and analysis methodologies and risk adjustment procedures.

(c) The state health department (lawmakers insert the appropriate department name here) shall establish a state-wide database of all risk-adjusted, hospitals-pecific infection rates and make it available to the public on a website and in printed materials that can be used by consumers, purchasers of healthcare, and advocacy groups to compare the performance of individual hospitals, and the aggregate performance of hospitals in the state with those in other states and nationwide.

(d) The first year of data submission under this section shall be considered the "pilot phase" of the reporting system. The pilot phase is to ensure the completeness and accuracy of hospital reporting and the fairness and completeness of the state health department’s report to the public. During this pilot phase, hospital identifiers shall be encrypted, the state health department (lawmakers insert proper department name here) shall provide each hospital with an encryption key for that hospital only, and no public hospital comparisons will be available. Sixty days after the end of the second year of data submission, the state health department (appropriate department name here) will provide its first report to the public with hospital-specific infection rates included.

(e) To ensure compliance with this law and the accuracy of self-reporting by the hospitals, the department shall establish an audit process. A civil penalty of $__________ shall be imposed on any hospital that fails to report on time, or is shown to substantially underreport infections, for each semi-annual reporting period.

(f) None of the data collected and reported under this law can be used in litigation against an individual hospital.

Innovative

Newsletter

New Unnecessary Deaths, 3rd Edition
unneccessary

NEW - PREVIEW RID'S PROPOSED NEW WEBSITE & LEAVE US FEEDBACK

RID SPINATHON--The Mid Hudson Times Reports RID's Latest Fund Raiser Bringing Families Together to Support RID

VIDEO - May 15th: RID Pushes for Timely Report Cards - CBS 6 Albany

April 16th: Testimony Before Congress

 

 

 

BREAKING NEWS: ...06-17--8, Betsy McCaughey speaks before the Association of Professionals in Infection Control (APIC) at the annual meeting in Denver, Co...04-16-08, Betsy McCaughey testifies before the House Committee on Government Oversight and Reform...3-12-08, RID Debates the validity of JAMA article finding MRSA screening ineffective...

IBD

May 14th, 2008 An Uphill Battle Against Hospital Infection

WORD  PDF

April 15, 2008 CDC's Deadly Mistakes

WORD  PDF

Forbes Magazine

February 20, 2008 Hospitals' Nightmare

WEB  WORD  PDF

NY Sun

December 27, 2007 Staph Meets Nurse Betsy

WORD  PDF

Wall Street Journal

November 27, 2007 Our Unsanitary Hospitals

WEB  WORD  PDF

Investors Business Daily

November 2, 2007 Give Hospitals the Right to Bare Arms

WEB  WORD  PDF

Indianapolis Star

October 19, 2007 Governments urged to make killer bugs a priority

WEB  WORD  PDF

Indianapolis Star

September 10, 2007 IU researcher leads fight against infections

WEB  WORD  PDF


Newsday

August 29, 2007 Medicare policy to hold hospitals more responsible

WEB  WORD  PDF


Boston Globe

August 27, 2007 Patient, protect thyself

WEB  WORD  PDF


Dallas Morning News Logo

August 21, 2007 Medicare gets stricter on hospitals

WEB  WORD  PDF


NY Sun

August 6, 2007 Saving New Yorkers' Lives

WEB  WORD  PDF


NY Times

July 27, 2007 Swabs in Hand, Hospital Cuts Deadly Infections

WEB  WORD  PDF


US News and World Report

July 2007 Why Aren't Hospitals Cleaner?

WEB  PDF


Ladies' Home Journal

May 2007 Are you safe from superbugs?

WEB  PDF


Ms. Magazine

Spring 2007 Germ Warfare

WEB  PDF


NY Sun

April 6, 2007 What the VA Does Right

WEB  WORD  PDF


Wall Street Journal

April 2, 2007 Letter to the Editor: "Dr. Masur's call..."

WEB  WORD  PDF


Los Angeles Times

April 2, 2007 Surprise: VA hospitals get high marks

WEB  WORD  PDF


Baltimore Sun

March 6, 2007 Outbreak response: A tale of two cities

WEB  WORD  PDF


Los Angeles Times

February 3, 2007 Doctors, wash your hands

WEB  WORD  PDF


AARP Bulletin

January, 2007 Dirty Hospitals

WEB  WORD  PDF


Wall Street Journal

December 26, 2006 With Infections on Rise, Hospital Tactics Vary

WEB  WORD  PDF


NY Times

November 14, 2006 To Catch a Deadly Germ

WEB  WORD  PDF


Forbes Magazine

June 19, 2006 Clean Hands

WEB  WORD  PDF


New York Law Journal

June 6, 2006 The Next Asbestos

WEB  WORD  PDF


Modern Healthcare

January 30, 2006 Saving lives and the bottom line

WEB  WORD  PDF


Daily News

July 21, 2005 Hosps must tell of infections

WEB  WORD  PDF


NY Times

June 5, 2005 Coming Clean

Hospitals can eradicate infection

WEB  WORD  PDF



Copyright (c) 2004-2005 The Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths. 
All rights reserved.  Medical Disclaimer