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NHS Trust eliminates MRSA



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  #1  
Old May 10, 2008, 01:48 PM
Silverdragon102's Avatar
Silverdragon102 (Female)
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Join Date: Aug 2003
NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

A hospital trust has eliminated superbug MRSA infections by changing the way they use devices for giving patients intravenous injections.

Last year there were 11 cases while this year there has been none.

http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/...315568,00.html



Would be interested in what other UK nurses think of this and whether worth doing in other Trusts. Nice if it definitely works and other trusts adopt something similar

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  #2  
Old May 10, 2008, 03:52 PM
traumaRUs's Avatar
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Re: NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

Thanks for the very interesting article. What exactly are they doing differently? Here in the US, our Medicare/Medicaid system (for people that are old, disabled/poor) will no longer pay the hospital for care of MRSA or VRE infections contracted while in the hospital. THis has resulted in every single pt who comes into the hospital being screened for MRSA/VRE.

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  #3  
Old May 10, 2008, 05:51 PM
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Silverdragon102 (Female)
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Re: NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

From what I can gather they are making a clinical decision on whether to insert a cannula and if one is required it is prescribed by a doctor and monitored regularly. Saying that when I nursed patients with a cannula I would inspect them a couple times every shift anyway. What I did see was a habit of inserting when one was not always required so nice to see a step away from that.

I know some hospitals screen for MRSA on admission but not sure if all hospitals do that now. I know when I had a operation done privately 3 years ago I was swabbed a week before the op for MRSA

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  #4  
Old May 10, 2008, 08:21 PM
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sharrie (Female)
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Re: NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

Sounds good, I would like to see what other measures they use as well and what the protocols are for those patients who are infected.

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  #5  
Old May 11, 2008, 05:56 AM
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LiverpoolJane (Female)
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Re: NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

Really interesting, on our ward we have now decided to swab every patient on admission as we are a high risk ward. Two years ago I convinced the Consultants and our Microbiology leads to let us use silver dressings for all our CVC exit sites. Thankfully the agreed as I was able to convince them it was cost effective. We reduced our MRSAs form 8 to 2 in 12 months, none of them were from a CVC exit site. We were getting the blame for the MRSA detected in patients that had come to us from ITU and now the ITU has started using our pathway.
We have started using disposable BP cuffs for our infected patients - MRSA, CDT, VRE etc. We also use stethescope diaphragm covers and are looking at a few other things we are putting in place in the next few weeks - very simple things not higfh tech expensive things.
We have tightened up on our periferal line insertion policy - it is now a strictly asceptic technique, the clinician inserting must fill in a profoma stating in was inserted as per policy. Failure to follow this policy can lead to disciplinary action.
I'm quite excited about the coming months, to see if all our efforts will propve affective. After reading a NY Times article I am tempted to order a load of disposable BP cuffs for each and every patient but I haven't had my budget statement in - if we are underspent I may just go ahead.

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  #6  
Old May 11, 2008, 05:59 AM
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Re: NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

Does Cannula mean IV??

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  #7  
Old May 11, 2008, 06:00 AM
Silverdragon102's Avatar
Silverdragon102 (Female)
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Join Date: Aug 2003
Re: NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

Originally Posted by LiverpoolJane View Post
Really interesting, on our ward we have now decided to swab every patient on admission as we are a high risk ward. Two years ago I convinced the Consultants and our Microbiology leads to let us use silver dressings for all our CVC exit sites. Thankfully the agreed as I was able to convince them it was cost effective. We reduced our MRSAs form 8 to 2 in 12 months, none of them were from a CVC exit site. We were getting the blame for the MRSA detected in patients that had come to us from ITU and now the ITU has started using our pathway.
We have started using disposable BP cuffs for our infected patients - MRSA, CDT, VRE etc. We also use stethescope diaphragm covers and are looking at a few other things we are putting in place in the next few weeks - very simple things not higfh tech expensive things.
We have tightened up on our periferal line insertion policy - it is now a strictly asceptic technique, the clinician inserting must fill in a profoma stating in was inserted as per policy. Failure to follow this policy can lead to disciplinary action.
I'm quite excited about the coming months, to see if all our efforts will propve affective. After reading a NY Times article I am tempted to order a load of disposable BP cuffs for each and every patient but I haven't had my budget statement in - if we are underspent I may just go ahead.
Some very good ideas there and like you said simple non expensive things. Nice one

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  #8  
Old May 11, 2008, 06:04 AM
Silverdragon102's Avatar
Silverdragon102 (Female)
Super Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2003
Re: NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

Originally Posted by Diary/Dairy View Post
Does Cannula mean IV??
For this article yes it means IV access

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  #9  
Old May 11, 2008, 06:04 AM
LiverpoolJane's Avatar
LiverpoolJane (Female)
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Re: NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

Originally Posted by Diary/Dairy View Post
Does Cannula mean IV??

Yes, the term cannula would usually refer to a periferal IV (venflon) then there is the CVC - central venous cannula (central line- internal jugular, femoral, sub clavian)

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  #10  
Old May 11, 2008, 03:58 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Re: NHS Trust eliminates MRSA

Nearly all our patients have venflons because they are either surgical cases having anasthaesia/PCA/other IV meds or medical patients requiring IV antibiotics/anti-emetics. We don't have MRSA because we are a private hospital with single rooms. We barrier nurse & swab any patient coming from another hospital/nursing home & we pre-screen anyone else thought to be at risk e.g coming in for debridement of infected wounds.

I've been there 2.5 years & to date we have not had a single case of MRSA caught in our hospital. We've had a couple already admitted from elsewhere that tested positive on our screening but they have stayed as isolated & not spread to others on the ward. Same with C-Diff.

We use silver dressings on our cannulae & they are removed asap (usually by me or another colleague whose hot on getting them out as soon as poss!)

Due to the volume of IV access needed it would not be practical for our doctors to have to prescribe venflons everytime but it is important to have good IV access care.

I always write the date on the dressing of any venflon I insert or see the docs insert, it's an easy way to check they've not been in too long.

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