
| Why Aren't Hospitals Cleaner?
COMMENTARY: Not all deadly infections come from dirty hands. Check the lab coats |

By Betsy McCaughey

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SCRUBS. Bacterial tests are rarely done, so whether a mopped floor has truly been disinfected is unknown. |
Restaurants and cruise ships are inspected for
cleanliness. Food processing plants are tested
for bacterial content on cutting boards and equipment.
But hospitals, even operating rooms, are exempt. The
Joint Commission, which inspects and accredits U.S. hospitals,
doesn't measure cleanliness. Neither do most state
health departments, nor the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
No wonder hospitals are dirty.
New data presented in April at the annual meeting of the Society
for Healthcare Epidemiology of America documented the
lack of hygiene in hospitals and its relationship to deadly infections.
Boston University researchers who examined 49 operating
rooms found that more than half of the objects that should have been disinfected were overlooked. A study of patient
rooms in 20 hospitals in Connecticut, Massachusetts,
and Washington, D.C., found that more than half the surfaces
that should have been cleaned for new patients were left dirty.
Germ-coated. Sad to say, cleanliness is not a priority for hospital
administrators or most medical professionals. A new University
of Maryland study shows that 65 percent of physicians
and other medical professionals admitted they hadn't washed
their lab coat in at least a week, even though they knew it was
dirty. Nearly 16 percent said they hadn't put on a clean lab coat
in at least a month. Lab coats become covered in bacteria when
doctors lean over the bedsides of patients who carry the organisms.
Days later the bacteria are still alive, repeatedly contaminating
doctors' hands and being carried to other patients.
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BEFORE YOU CHECK IN...
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If your hospitalization is prescheduled, heeding these tips before you go will
lower the likelihood of infection while you're there.

Bug the surgeon. Surgeons
know their infection rate for each of the procedures they perform. Don't be afraid to ask about a surgeon's infection rate for your procedure. Choosing a surgeon with a low infection rate could save your life.

Get tested. Ask your doctor
to test you for MRSA, a potent strain of bacteria that shrugs off all but the most powerful antibiotics. You
might be carrying it in your nose or on your skin. It generally won't make you sick unless it gets inside
your bodyusually via a catheter, a breathing device, or a break in the skin such as a surgical incision.
A simple nasal or skin swab will tell the tale. If you test positive for MRSA, precautions can be taken, including
giving you the correct antibiotic before surgery.

Debug yourself. Begin
showering daily with chlorhexidine soap five days
ahead of a scheduled surgical procedure. The soap,
available without a prescription, helps remove bacteria
lurking on the skin, waiting to invade an incision. Remember
that a cesarean delivery is surgery, too.

Snuff the smokes. Smoking
hampers circulation in the body, impeding infectionfighting blood cells. Patients who smoke are three
times as likely as nonsmokers to become infected at
the site of their surgery. Cut down. Better still,
quit, at least for a while.
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The CDC and other organizations urge caregivers to clean
their hands between patients, and even advise patients to speak up and request that caregivers
have clean hands (box, Page 85).
That's a start, but it's not enough. As long as hospitals are
inadequately cleaned, doctors' and nurses' hands will be recontaminated
seconds after they are washed—when they touch a keyboard, open a supply closet, pull open a privacy curtain, or
contact other bacterialaden surfaces. In a recent Johns
Hopkins Hospital study, 26 percent of supply cabinets were
contaminated with a dangerous bacterium, methicillinresistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and 21 percent with another stubborn germ, vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus
(VRE). Keyboards are such reservoirs of deadly bacteria that a
few hospitals are installing washable keyboards, including one
that sounds an alarm if it isn't disinfected periodically.
Hand to mouth. Stethoscopes, blood pressure cuffs, and EKG
wires are used on successive patients without being cleaned.
Studies published as long ago as 1978 warn that blood
pressure cuffs frequently carry live bacteria, including MRSA,
and are a source of infection. In a newly released British
report, one third of blood pressure cuffs were found to be
contaminated with Clostridium difficile, a germ that can cause
lethal diarrhea if it enters via the mouth. It's a short trip from a
cuff to a patient's bare arm, then to the fingertips and into the
mouth. At a hospital in Galveston,Texas, where a burn patient
became infected with VRE, molecular typing traced the
bacteria to an unclean EKG wire. The VRE on the wire had been left behind by a patient
discharged 38 days earlier.
The good news is that a simple solutionthorough cleaning
with ordinary detergents and watercurbs the spread of deadly
bacteria. When researchers at Rush University Medical Center
in Chicago trained the staff to soak surfaces with detergent
rather than merely spraying and wiping, and to clean commonly
overlooked objects such as telephones, remote controls, and
faucets, the spread of VRE to patients was reduced by two thirds.
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...AND AFTER YOU'RE THERE
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Once in the hospital, taking these steps will help keep
bugs at bay and bolster your resistance as well:

Clip, please. If body hair has
to be removed, request clippers. A razor can create nicks that are like an openhouse
invitation to bacteria.

Would you mind? Ask the
staff to clean their hands before
touching you. If you're
worried about being pushy, a
family member or friend can
make the request. Keeping
alcoholbased hand cleaner
on the bedside table makes
it easier to say apologetically,
"Excuse me, but would
you mind cleaning your
hands with this so I can see
you do it? Thanks. It would
make me feel better."

Don't trust gloves. If caregivers
don gloves without
cleaning their hands first, or
pull them on and touch the
bedrail or privacy curtain, the
gloves are contaminated.

Keep germs at bay. Wash
your own hands often, avoid
putting them to your mouth
(an entry point especially for
C. difficile), and don't let
your food or utensils touch
furniture or bedsheets.

Tube or not tube? Avoid a
urinary tract catheter if possible it lets germs in as well as urine out. Sometimes
catheters are used less for medical reasons than because a busy staff doesn't have time to walk patients to
the bathroom. Often a catheter is left in because it is out of sight beneath the sheets.
By the third day, the risk of infection has increased substantially.
If you must have a catheter, ask your doctor or nurse frequently: "Do I still need this?"
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Even the cashstrapped British National Health Service
recognizes that intensive cleaning is a bargain compared with
the cost of treating infections. By nearly doubling cleaningstaff
hours on one ward, a hospital in Dorchester reduced the
spread of MRSA by 90 percent, saving 31/2 times the added
cleaning costs.
Hospitals once tested surfaces for bacteria, but in 1970, the
CDC and the American Hospital Association advised them
to stop, saying testing was unnecessary and not cost effective.
MRSA infections since then have increased 32fold, and numerous
studies have linked unclean hospital equipment and
rooms to infections. Yet the CDC's latest guidelines still deem
routine testing for bacteria unnecessary. "If you culture on a
regular basis, you're always going to find something," says
Denise Cardo, who runs the CDC's division of healthcare quality
promotion. "You don't want the labs to be used for that
instead of tests on patients."
Are we to believe that it is less important to test for bacteria
in operating rooms than in hot dog factories?
Testing is essential because bacteria are invisible. A study
in the Journal of Hospital Infection showed that 76 percent
of various hospital sites checked by researchers had unacceptably
high levels of bacteria, although only 18 percent of
them looked dirty. In another study, Boston University researchers
found that cleaning improved significantly once they
sampled surfaces for bacteria and showed cleaning personnel
the areas they had missed.
Unreasonable standard? You'd think that a hospital accredited
by the Joint Commission would be clean, but it's no guarantee.
California hospital inspectors, investigating complaints from
the public, found that 25 percent of hospitals where conditions
were unsanitary had been inspected and accredited by the
Joint Commission within the previous year.
If Joint Commission inspectors walk into a noticeably
messy and unclean patient room, they will trace back to
find out how that happened, explains Robert Wise, vice
president for standards and survey methods. Otherwise,
Joint Commission standards don't specify how rooms
should be cleaned or what bacterial levels are unacceptable.
Asked whether bacterial levels should be measured,
Wise answers: "You can only ask hospitals to do so much."
 | | BETSY MCCAUGHEY is chairman of
the Committee to Reduce Infection
Deaths (www.hospitalinfection.org),
a national effort focusing on
hospitals. She was lieutenant
governor of New York and has
published widely in health policy. | |
That seems to be the CDC's attitude as well. For over 30
years, the CDC has been collecting monthly data recording
a sharp rise in drugresistant hospital infections. A new
report from a nursing organization, the Association for Professionals
in Infection Control and Epidemiology, shows
that the CDC has consistently underreported MRSA in hospitals,
giving them an excuse to do too little.
In 2005, health officials in Ireland and Scotland began
rating hospitals annually for cleanlinessred (the dirtiest),
amber, or greenand publishing the ratings. The first-year
results made headlines, putting pressure on the worst Irish
hospitals to clean up and earn higher marks in 2006.
In England last month, Gregory Barker, a member of
Parliament, rolled up his sleeves and worked a shift with
the cleaning staff at a hospital in his district. "Hospital
cleaning is a vital part of patient care," he said in a statement
released by his office. Where are his counterparts in
Washington, D.C.? Congress has been virtually silent
about hospital infectionsand no member has displayed
any interest in picking up a mop.
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