Weather Tonight: 5°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 9°c Cloudy

News

The battle to beat MRSA

Evening Standard comment
4 Oct 2007


Lord Darzi, the surgeon who is carrying out a wide-ranging health review for the Government, is right to call for every patient admitted to hospital to be tested for the MRSA antibiotic-resistant bug and other infections.

Even though superbugs drew criticism of Labour throughout the 2005 election campaign, and a leaked memo earlier this year warned that the target for the rate of MRSA bloodstream infections to be halved was going to be missed, a problem with a political as well as a clinical dimension has not been tackled with anything like the urgency required.

Experts agree better hygiene would help. The Chief Medical Officer, Sir Liam Donaldson, earlier this year told hospital staff to wash their hands between seeing every patient, but on average they do so only 40 per cent of the time and in some institutions far less often.

This paper's own medical expert Dr Mark Porter has long warned readers both to demand that staff test them for infection on admission, and to refuse to be examined unless nurses and doctors wash their hands first. Yet it is only now that we are being told that routine tests when patients are admitted are to become a matter of course - in an announcement whose timing may be linked to the prospect of a general election.

And questions must be asked about the plan for those screening positive for MRSA and other infections to be placed in isolation. One in 30 of the British population carries MRSA. We need evidence that hospitals have isolation facilities available on the scale required if this recommendation is to be taken seriously.

The Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, has already announced plans for an annual "deep clean" of wards - but as medics immediately pointed out, efforts to carry an annual exercise may distract from the more important regular cleaning regime that is required.

It is true that MRSA cases are falling - though not fast enough to meet the target set for next April - but other infections such as C. difficile are proliferating. Britain's rates of hospital-acquired infection remain high by European standards.

This is not a new problem, and it is a profoundly alarming one for patients. Lord Darzi's prescription makes sense but it needs resources and political will if it is to make any difference.

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


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.


 

 

  • Boris takes lead in closest ever race for City Hall Boris Johnson Exclusive poll: Boris Johnson has clawed his way back to a two-point lead in the closest mayoral race yet despite Ken Livingstone's...
  • Londoners urged to get out and vote in neck-and-neck contest Ken Boris split Poll results: Every Londoner has been urged to register to vote in the mayoral election on May 3 to take the turnout above 50 per...
  • Greek vote for more cuts boosts share prices over Europe Greece parliament Shares surged across Europe after Greece pushed through a fresh package of austerity measures needed to secure fresh bailout cash and save...
  • In pursuit of glory, women cyclists aim to be fastest ever Rowsell Two Team GB cyclists today pledged to go "faster than anyone has ever gone" in the Olympics
  • Brick Lane, not Tarmac Lane! Brick Lane A council has been accused of ruining the character of Brick Lane by laying tarmac over its famous cobbles
  • Ali Dizaei facing jail after second corruption conviction Ali Dizaei One of Scotland Yard's most senior officers is facing prison after being convicted for a second time of trying to frame an innocent man
  • Whitney Houston was dead before she went under the water Whitney o2 Singer Whitney Houston died from a mix of drugs and alcohol - and did not drown in her hotel bath, according to reports
  • Triumph for Adele as she finds her voice on tragic night at the Grammys adele Adele made a triumphant return after vocal cord surgery to win a record six Grammy Awards
  • Radical cleric Abu Qatada banned from school run Qatada A radical cleric described as Osama bin Laden's right-hand man in Europe will be banned from taking his youngest child to school when he is...
  • I was scared, says 'target' in shooting that paralysed girl Thusha Kamaleswaran The suspected target of a shooting that left a five-year-old girl paralysed for life today told a court he was "scared" before the attack
  •  

    Don't Miss