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Hospital ward closed after C diff death

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Published Date: 26 June 2009
ONE patient has died and another five are being treated for infection after an outbreak of the Colostrium difficile virus at a hospital in the Highlands.
NHS Grampian has imposed a ban on new admissions to a medical ward at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary (ARI) following the C diff outbreak. Five patients in ward 13 are being treated for the infection. In the case of the patient that died, C diff
was listed as a contributory cause.

The outbreak at ARI follows an outbreak in April at another NHS Grampian hospital, Dr Gray's in Elgin, in which one elderly patient died as a direct result of contracting the infection. C diff was also listed as a contributory cause in the death of another patient.

A spokeswoman for NHS Grampian said: "Ward 13 at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary is not currently admitting new patients due to a higher than usual number of cases of Clostridium difficile Five patients on the ward have C difficile. The clinical condition of these five patients is not giving cause for concern and they are being treated together.

"Unfortunately, a sixth patient on ward 13 has died. C difficile was not the primary cause, however it was one of a number of secondary factors.

"An outbreak control team has been set up as part of the infection control response."

The spokeswoman added: "There are 13 patients on this medical ward. Patients and families have been fully briefed by the ward staff."

Alisdair Chisholm, the general manager for acute services at NHS Grampian, said: "We regret any inconvenience caused to patients and their families. Infection control and patient safety is our paramount concern. We are working very hard to control the risk of spread of infection."

C diff is a bacterium that causes diarrhoea and more serious intestinal conditions such as colitis. It is found in around one in 50 healthy adults who carry the bug without showing any symptoms.





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  • Last Updated: 25 June 2009 10:21 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Evia,

26/06/2009 01:52:48
Take the cleaning out of the hands of private contractors and bring back the old style matrons and hygiene would be vastly improved. The old matrons could be tyrants but they got results.
2

Sioux Man Chu,

26/06/2009 07:22:34
#1 Agree with the 1st part of your statement however as for matrons - we have them in our hospital and they are so overloaded with paperwork and meetings that they barely have time o spend 'real' time on the wards. Everything they do is a paper exercise ticking boxes for government directives. They end up taking much of this paperwork home to do in their own time.
3

Strict Ivan Jellicoe,

Renfrew 26/06/2009 11:35:01
However, on the plus side, Margaret Thatcher who did so much to improve the NHS and make it more efficient - has received wonderful treatment on the NHS for her broken arm.
4

JennyA,

Scotland 26/06/2009 13:06:22
Quote:-
'Ward 13 is not currently admitting new patients due to a higher than usual number of cases of Clostridium difficile.'

Pardon me -but what exactly is considered to be the 'usual number of cases' of highly infectious Clostridium difficile in a busy NHS Hospital ward?
This is the third C diff outbreak to have occurred this year in Northern Scotland. They ALL involved some fatalities.

This nasty bacterium is hospital acquired in the vast majority of cases. May I ask exactly WHEN patients can have confidence that their safety is the top priority in our NHS hospitals?


 

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