Hospital Infection Control & Prevention – July 1, 2015
July 1, 2015
View Issues
-
MERS surge: Virus explodes in Korea, CDC ups U.S. guidelines
Though MERS was stopped cold last year in the U.S. when two unrelated cases were admitted to hospitals, infection preventionists should maintain a high level of vigilance given a global situation marked by the continuing emergence of the coronavirus.
-
Hospital Infection Control & Prevention receives two SIPAwards
Hospital Infection Control & Prevention recently won first place for Best Analytical Reporting at the annual Specialized Information Publishers Association's awards in Washington, DC.
-
WHO keys to stopping the outbreak in Korea
WHO advice: race contacts, designate hospitals, fully inform the public
-
MERS may be spreading in Saudi Arabia from thousands of mild, asymptomatic cases
MERS may be spreading in Saudi Arabia from thousands of mild, asymptomatic cases.
-
CDC updated MERS guidelines call for a full-court press
The CDC has updated its guidance for MERS, but the essential concept remains in place: Throw everything but the kitchen sink at it.
-
APIC 2015: Data collection overkill forcing IPs back into silos, undermining patient safety
Collecting and reporting hospital infection data to federal health agencies takes more than five hours each day.
-
APIC 2015: Pilot program in pediatric long-term care cuts topical antibiotic use, decreases orders
A pilot antibiotic stewardship program at a pediatric long-term care facility led to a 59% decrease in use of a topical antibiotic and an 83% decrease in orders for antibiotics without proper documentation during a six-month period, according to a study presented recently in Nashville at the annual APIC conference.
-
APIC 2015: Daily bathing of pediatric patients with antiseptic reduces BSIs
Daily bathing of pediatric patients with disposable cloths containing 2% chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) reduced central line-associated bloodstream infections by 59% and saved approximately $300,000 in one hospital over a six-month period, according to a study presented recently in Nashville at the annual APIC conference.