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Hard questions over superbug outbreak



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DEATHS from the superbug Clostridium difficile at a Scottish hospital have shocked the nation, leading to heavy criticism of the health board involved.
But what is starting to emerge as a major cause of concern is the fact that the large number of cases of the bug – affecting more than 50 patients and involved in 18 deaths – was only spotted when clinicians looked back at cases, by which time it wa
s too late for many.

You would like to think that once cases of the potentially deadly infection reached a certain level, alarm bells would start ringing. Not so, if the Vale of Leven Hospital is anything to go by.

One leading scientist told The Scotsman that it was "very surprising" that surveillance systems did not pick up the cases until so far down the line.

"It is very simple – you could work it out on the back of an envelope," he said. "Perhaps they were short of pencils."

But there are fears the situation at the Vale of Leven may not be isolated.

The scientist asked: "If it could happen there, why couldn't it happen anywhere else?"

And questions also need to be asked further up the line, such as why the central surveillance system at Health Protection Scotland (HPS) did not react to the large number of cases being seen at the Vale. Was the agency even sent the figures in the first place?

No doubt these are questions which should be answered by the review ordered by Nicola Sturgeon, the health secretary.

Statistics are often troubling for organisations like HPS.

When The Scotsman last year asked for surveillance figures for C difficile a few months after the programme started, HPS was reluctant to supply them ahead of official publication.

It was only after appealing and asking for a second time that these figures were supplied, revealing up to 6,000 patients in Scotland were being struck with the bug in a year.

Figures also obtained by The Scotsman showed that, in 2006, there were 164 deaths where C difficile was the main cause.

But one thing is sure. In future, such figures will be more widely available, lest the Scottish Government is accused of trying to hide the scale of the problem.

The result of the review ordered by Ms Sturgeon is likely to reveal a series of errors leading to the situation at the Vale.

"It is probably going to be the result of lots of little things going wrong to make one bad situation," the scientist said. "But there is something wrong with the system if these things are not being picked up."





The full article contains 443 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 24 June 2008 10:00 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Hospital superbugs
 
1

Guga II,

Rockall 25/06/2008 05:35:48
As I've said before, the only way to put a stop to Hospital Acquired Infections, is for the Health Boards concerned to be sued for large amounts of money, and for managers to be prosecuted for corporate culpable homicide.

Gaoling a few managers would soon make them get their act together.

2

Bewildered,

Glasgow 25/06/2008 15:33:52
Strange how it is managers who should be "gaoled" and not doctors or nurses who actually treat patients.
3

linda mccafferty,

Glasgow 25/06/2008 20:00:38
We have a Bewildered mangager commenting i presume !!!
4

JennyA,

Scotland 29/06/2008 15:29:36
In Maidstone, Kent, they admitted to 10 deaths from C.difficile. One of them was Cheryl Baker's glamourous Mother in law, Doreen, who had overcome cancer only to succumb to this after a hospital visit. Health Commission investigating officers had a 'root and branch' search for C.difficile cases. The 90 probable deaths were a 'conservative estimate'; this was often not mentioned on death certificates.
Scottish NHS Trusts have now been told to 'bring out their dead'; but again, how many deaths from C.difficile have been honestly recorded on death certificates?

 

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