Home     |    Power Search     |    About Us     |    Contact Us     |    Currency Display    
Health Concern Catalog  |  Request Catalog  |  Shipping Information  |  Educate Yourself!  |  Testimonies
Login
» Login Here
» Forgot Password?
» New User?
Browse Catalog
Activated Charcoal
Allimax (Best Garlic Available)
Amish B & W Ointment
Barleans Organic Oils
Blender Bottles by Sundesa
Better Than Greens
Books
Buried Treasure Liquid Nutrients
CELLFOOD
Celtic Sea Salt
Colloidal Silver
Dandy Blend (Healthy Coffee!)
Dr. Christophers Formulas
Ear Candles
Empty Capsules
ENP - Effective Natural Products
First Aid Must Haves
Forever Living Products
Golden Eagle Herbal Chew
Grocery
Hand Made Soap
Healthy Home Products
Herbs - Bulk & Tea Bags
Hydrogen Peroxide
Kitchen Appliances
Maxam Nutraceutics
Perrins Products
Personal Products
Peter Gillhams Natural Vitality
Pets
Products for Children
Products For Men
Products for Seniors
Products for Women
Sports Nutrition
Supplements
Tea Tree Therapy
Truehope EMPowerplus Nutrition for Mental Health
Transformation Enzymes
UNKERs Medicated Salve
Unassigned
Recipes
Better Than Greens Information
NEW START
MUST READS!
Vitamins & Minerals
Garden of Life
Gift Certificate
On Sale
Join Newsletter


Satisfaction Guaranteed: Try It For Yourself... You Have Nothing To Lose And Lots To Gain – We Offer A 100% Money Back Guarantee. You Are The Judge!     
» Home » MUST READS! » Dangers of Hospitals

Dangers of Hospitals

Safety of Our US Hospitals

 

By Will Dunham Mon Nov 20, 7:23 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hospital practices are more to blame than how sick a person is for infections acquired by hospital patients, researchers reported on Monday, urging medical centers to do more to curb these infections.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month estimated that infections caught in U.S. hospitals kill 90,000 people annually and urged hospitals to do more to track and prevent the infections.

Putting a spotlight on the topic, the American Journal of Medical Quality issued three studies on hospital-acquired infections. Two put the blame more on hospital procedures than on how a sick patient was when he or she checked in.

The third study burst the myth that hospitals actually make more money when patients get these infections, saying hospitals lost thousands of dollars for each such patient.

"The main message here to us was a hospital-acquired infection is not to be considered a sort of byproduct of an extremely ill person coming to a hospital in the United States," said the journal's editor, Dr. David Nash of Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.

Researchers examined data on surgical wound infections in Pennsylvania to gauge whether the severity of patient illness upon arrival at a hospital or events that took place at the hospital were more to blame.

They judged that both factors had an effect, but more of the risk hinged on what transpired inside the hospital.

Researcher Christopher Hollenbeak said patients who smoked, had diabetes or were obese were at increased risk for surgical wound infections. But he pointed to hospital practices like techniques for hair removal, people coming in and out of the operating room and duration of the surgery as factors that increased risk of infection.

"Of course, certain patient characteristics turned out to be important. But they were essentially swamped by the hospital characteristics," Nash said.

Pennsylvania last week became the first U.S. state to issue infection data for individual hospitals. More than 19,000 patients came down with an infection last year in the state's 168 hospitals, and 2,478 of these patients died.

Researchers examined the economic impacts of certain bloodstream infections at a Pittsburgh hospital. They wanted to determine whether hospitals actually made money when a patient ended up being treated not only for the original condition that caused hospitalization but the subsequent infection as well.

Out of 54 cases over three years, the hospital received payment of $64,894, with an average expense of $91,733 for an average estimated loss of $26,839, the study found.

Nash called it "the first time that we had solid evidence that this was actually a money-losing proposition for hospitals."
*****************************************************************************************************
Just think, nearly 250 people are dying a day in the US, from infections they caught while in the hospital!  In PA alone, 7 people are dying a every day!  If the people knew this, they would think twice about going to the hospital for anything that was not really necessary!  Too bad the news agencies don't post everyday, how many people die in our US hospitals, like they post how many die in Iraq everyday!  I think fewer die in Iraq everday than in our own hospitals!
 
 

 


Shopping Cart
Your Shopping
Cart Is Empty
 

bizrate Customer Certified Site - Better Than Greens Reviews at Bizrate
On Sale

Other Categories
   Resources Links   
   Recipes  
   New Start  
   B.T.G. Information  
   Must Read!  
   Our Policy  
   Tell A Friend  
   Site Map  

Powered By: eCommerce Software  
Home | Search | About Us | Tell A Friend | Contact Us | Links | Site Map
Log In  | Register | Shopping Cart  | Wish List | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Send Feedback

© Copyright 2001-2012 Better Than Greens All Rights Reserved
Site By: NetzBiz Shopping Cart