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Showing posts with label Physician's Weekly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Physician's Weekly. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Bladder catheter + oxygen supply tubing = death
You may not be aware that I blog twice a month for the Physician's Weekly website. My latest post is called "Bladder catheter + oxygen supply tubing = death" and it can be read by clicking here.
This x-ray shows what happened to an elderly man whose oxygen tubing somehow became connected to his bladder catheter.
Labels:
Catheter,
Medical Errors,
Oxygen,
Physician's Weekly
Monday, August 27, 2012
Hospital installs hand washing surveillance cameras
Doctors and nurses in the ICU at Long Island’s North Shore University
Hospital are being watched by 39 video cameras in an effort to increase
compliance with hand washing. According to a report hand washing compliance is
up from less than 10% to 90% since the program started.
Cameras are positioned near the doors of patient rooms and
at sinks Patients are not being videoed. The real-time feed is observed by
workers in India. Staff failure to wash hands is noted, and the results are
posted on electronic bulletin boards in the unit. So far, miscreants are simply
talked to.
"No one's been fired, no one’s been written up but
there have been one-on-ones," the news story
says and, “Infections have decreased though an exact percentage was
unavailable.” That raises the question of how they would know if infections
have really decreased if the exact percentage is unavailable. And there’s another
question, “Is the decrease statistically significant?”
This venture, while well-intended, seems like a bad idea to
me. I suppose you are thinking, “Could Skeptical Scalpel really be against hand
washing?” Well, I’m not. But what seems logical and correct sometimes may not
be. For example, everyone knows that sinks with faucets that have electronic
eye sensors are cleaner and better to use in hospitals than sinks with manual
faucets, right?
A study
presented at a meeting of the Society
for Healthcare Epidemiology of America last year by a group from Johns Hopkins concluded
the following: Electronic faucets
were more likely to become contaminated with Legionella spp. (species)
and other bacteria after water system disruption. Electronic faucets were less
likely to be disinfected after chlorine dioxide remediation. Electronic faucet
components may provide points of concentrated bacterial growth. These findings led to removal of all
electronic faucets from clinical areas in our institution. [Emphasis
added.]
Washing hands with soap and water may cause dryness and
irritation resulting in skin breakdown. It may be that constant, obsessive hand
washing and use of gels could promote the emergence of resistant organisms.
Another potential issue with the video observation is a false
accusation of failure to wash. Patient rooms and patients themselves are not
being watched. Let’s say a nurse went into a patient’s room to tell him
something and didn’t touch anything. A person in India watching a video from a
camera focused on a door or sink would not be able to tell that. If the nurse
doesn’t wash her hands when she leaves the room, is she going to be
cross-examined?
And what about cost? How much does it cost to install and
maintain 39 video cameras, stream the video to India and pay people there to
watch the monitors and feed back the information 24 hours per day? Remember,
they have no proof that video surveillance reduces infections.
What does this scheme say about the relationship of the professional
staff to the hospital’s administration? More problematic is the fact that even
though they know they should, doctors and nurses at a major medical center
apparently cannot be trusted to wash their hands unless they are spied upon.
What else do they not do?
Instead of issuing press releases about this ill-advised
program, hospital management might want to consider investigating why their
staff is non-compliant.
Labels:
Hand washing,
Infection,
Nursing,
Physician's Weekly,
Physicians