To meet patient demand, Snellville, GA-based Emory Eastside Medical Center is planning a $100 million expansion that will increase capacity by more than a third. The project will add 72 beds, bringing the total to 282. The expansion, which also will include additional parking and a medical office building, could create between 300 and 400 new jobs, according to a medical center spokesman. The project's centerpiece is a four-story tower that would house three patient floors with 24 beds each.
An attempt to organize nurses in Ohio is pitting the Service Employees International Union and the California Nurses Association against each other. The dispute between two of the nation's largest labor groups stems from an effort by both unions to organize 8,000 nurses at nine Catholic Healthcare Partners hospitals in Ohio. The two unions are also battling for members in California.
The North Philadelphia Health System has unveiled its 91,100 square-foot, $4.5 million emergency department at St. Joseph's Hospital. The new ER is more than double the size of the former emergency room at the North Philadelphia hospital. It can accommodate 22,000 patients annually, while the former ER was about half the size needed to handle the hospital's patient volume for emergency care.
Three more women have died while, or shortly after, giving birth at Northwick Park in London. The hospital was investigated and placed in special measures after 10 deaths between 2002 and 2005.
North West London Hospitals NHS Trust, which runs Northwick Park, has decided to undertake a "broad internal review" to ensure that the improved practices that were put in place while the trust was in special measures, which ended in September 2006, have been maintained.
In 2002, medical tourism to India brought in earnings of $300 million. Every year since then, the number of medical tourists travelling to the country has increased by about 25% every yaer. One report projects that India's earnings through medical tourism would go up to $2 billion by 2012. Some say superior quality of medical service coupled with the low cost of surgeries is responsible for making the country one of the most attractive destinations for medical value travel.
Consider how hard it is in the healthcare industry to implement the seemingly simple and sensible. Case in point, the superbugs MRSA and C. difficile have had their way in hospitals around the globe, from the smallest clinics in the developing world to some of the finest state-of-the-art academic medical centers. Despite widespread acknowledgement of the problem--from policymakers, hospital executives, and clinicians--agreement and compliance with basic protocols are often hard to come by.
My colleague, Kathryn Mackenzie noted in this month's HealthLeaders magazine that Britain has recently imposed a dress code for physicians and other clinicians. They no longer can wear sleeves below the elbows, neckties, jewelry, and fake fingernails.
"We are not unique in facing the perils of [hospital-acquired infections]: Every country in the world is grappling with something that has always been a factor in healthcare. We are, however, the only country which has a mandatory universal surveillance system," said Alan Johnson, MP, secretary of state for health for Britain, in a speech last year discussing steps the country has taken to reduce hospital-acquired infection.
Johnson's administration admits that the ban is not supported by hard scientific evidence, but is part of a common sense approach to improve hand hygiene. His policy, however, was not commonly embraced; rather, some charged Johnson with pandering to the media and, in fact, shifting the health system's focus away from proven methods to combat superbugs.
Indeed, some physicians took issue with the health secretary because they felt the new dress code made them appear unprofessional. One doctor quoted in a London newspaper called banning neckties ridiculous: "We wear neckties because patients expect us to look smart, but bow ties will make us look like circus clowns."
Two other physicians, in a letter to the British Medical Journal, said that banning wristwatches could actually harm patients, because a study showed that many doctors are unable to accurately estimate pulse and respiration rates without their wristwatches.
Despite Britain's tribulations with its new dress code, many hospitals are seeing incremental improvements in their quest to shrink patient infection rates. In fact, my colleague, Maureen Larkin pointed out in her Web exclusive column last week that at the organizational level common sense approaches to fighting the spread of dangerous infections can succeed.
But healthcare hygiene efforts need to be carried out with military-like precision and zeal. That means continual reminders and buy-in throughout the ranks of the organization. Like many aspects of clinical care, we are talking about the perils of human decision-making. It takes only a few forgetful employees to deviate from your protocol to greatly increase exposure.
If nothing else, perhaps Britain's well-reported ban will have a psychological effect on caregivers. True, the dress code might not have a direct impact on limiting hospital-acquired infections, but maybe it will remind physicians to pay careful attention to hand hygiene. So the ban might have a kind of transfer effect that delivers real value.
With so much emphasis on the importance of communicating hand-washing protocols, I thought I'd share this short video I spotted on YouTube by Elspeth Connatty, RN, RGN (UK), RM (UK), with the Department of Infection Control for University of San Francisco Medical Center.
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