Weather Afternoon: 6°c Sleet Tonight: 2°c Mostly cloudy

News

Doctors who don't wash hands kill more people than drink drivers

Last updated at 23:52pm on 25.10.06

 Add your view

 

One in five clinical staff neglect to wash their hands between patients

Doctors and nurses who fail to wash their hands cause as much damage as drink drivers, a top NHS adviser said today.

According to recent research, as many as one in five clinical staff neglect to wash their hands between patients, despite evidence it reduces hospital infection.

Speaking at the International Society for Quality in Healthcare conference today, Sir John Oldham, Head of the Improvement Foundation, said clinicians who fail to wash their hands should be treated with "equal disdain" to drink drivers.

"Simple things like clean wards and effective hand washing between patients cuts the incidence of hospital acquired infections enormously. How hard is that?"

"Given the existence of MRSA, not having clean wards and not washing your hands is the clinical equivalent of drink driving. It maims and kills." "And we should treat it with equal disdain. This isn't the fault of the government; it is the responsibility of individuals."

He added effective hand washing has been proven to cut the occurrence of hospital acquired infections, which cost the NHS £1 billion every year.

Sir John referred to figures from both the Office of Statistics and the Department of Transport which showed that in 2004, MRSA killed 1,168 patients in England and Wakes, compared to the 580 people who died as a result of drink driving incidents in Great Britain.


Bookmark and Share
 
 

Reader views (2)

 Add your view

The countries with the lowest prevalence of MRSA have screening of all doctors and nurses to see who carries MRSA up their nose, and then they have to stay off work till MRSA has been eradicated - it doesnt happen here because it would cost too much.

Also the majority of their hospital beds are in single rooms. They probably pay and treat the cleaners better.

Don't get me wrong, washing your hands is a good thing, but its just part of the issue and our government has highlighted it because its cheap and a way of transferring blame if all else fails.

- Duncan, Suffolk, 26/10/2006 16:35
Report abuse

These startistics show that if you survive a drink driving incident they have a better chance of getting you when you are addmitted to Hospital.

- Frank, Wolverhampton, England., 26/10/2006 15:17
Report abuse


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.