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CDC warns of drug-resistant ‘superbug,’ urges facilities to act

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“Compliance with hand-washing, with using gowns and gloves properly, remains a challenge, and it’s something that we call on health care facilities to work with their providers” to do a better job of, said Arjun Srinivasan, the CDC’s associate director for hospital-associated infection prevention programs. “We have the weapons at our disposal right now to stop this from becoming a bigger problem.”

Nancy Foster, vice president of quality and patient safety policy at the American Hospital Association, said hospital testing should be a facility’s decision, based on the prevalence and risk of CRE in the area. The added cost of testing and the protocol that comes with it is often an expense that many hospitals would struggle to fund, but Foster said the AHA supports hospitals looking for creative ways to finance those efforts.

Over the last decade, the proportion of Enterobacteriaceae bacteria that is resistant to carbapenem antibiotics has grown from 1 percent to 4 percent, while the prevalence of the most common CRE has grown from 2 percent to 10 percent.

“That’s a very troubling increase,” Frieden said. “The good news is that we still have time to stop CRE. Many facilities can act now to prevent CRE from emerging, or if it has emerged, to control it.”

He called on health care facilities to adopt a “detect and protect” strategy. Among the steps: increasing patient testing, including incoming and transferring patients, and requiring immediate notification of results; following special hygiene guidelines when dealing with CRE-infected patients; and dedicating rooms, staff and equipment for CRE patients.

Another step would be removing medical devices, like catheters, as quickly as possible to avoid infection, and prescribing antibiotics more carefully to avoid overuse, which increases drug-resistant infections.

Betsy McCaughey, chairman and founder of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths, a patient advocacy group, said Frieden’s recommendations were disappointing and “half-baked” because they didn’t call for universal mandatory CRE screenings at hospitals and public reporting of the data.

“Any patient planning to go to in a hospital has a right to know if there are germs in that hospital,” McCaughey said.

Only six states — Tennessee, Oregon, Minnesota, Colorado, Wisconsin and North Dakota — require reporting of CRE infections in hospitals, Frieden said, adding that the CDC supports those measures.

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