£7m drive to screen patients for superbug
Published Date:
27 March 2008
By LYNDSAY MOSS
HEALTH CORRESPONDENT
ALMOST one million people across Scotland are set to benefit from a pilot programme to screen patients for MRSA, the health secretary announced yesterday.
Nicola Sturgeon said NHS Ayrshire and Arran, NHS Grampian and NHS Western Isles had been chosen as "pathfinder" health boards to test the screening of everyone coming to hospital in a bid to cut MRSA infections.
The health boards will now spend the next couple of months preparing to start the screening programme before the first patients are tested.
If successful, the £7 million pilot programme will lead to screening programmes being introduced in every health board from 2009-10. It comes after research suggested MRSA screening was not effective in cutting hospital-acquired infections.
Ms Sturgeon told the Scottish Parliament: "The pilots will be an exhaustive test of the screening model and will ensure any necessary adjustments can be made before the programme is rolled out across Scotland."
She also announced a £90,000 investment to allow the Care Commission to recruit a nurse consultant for infection prevention and control.
The full article contains 182 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
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Last Updated:
26 March 2008 9:54 PM
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Source:
The Scotsman
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Location:
Edinburgh
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Related Topics:
Hospital superbugs