Responding to the Superbug Crisis

Responding to the Superbug Crisis
MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) bacteria strain in a petri dish containing agar jelly. MRSA is a drug-resistant “superbug,” which can cause deadly infections. (Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters)
Betsy McCaughey
10/20/2022
Updated:
10/23/2022
0:00
Commentary

Hospital rooms, operating rooms, and medical equipment are so inadequately cleaned that any patient going into a hospital is at risk of getting a deadly superbug. That’s true even if you’re going for the happiest reason of all: to give birth.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s latest data show alarming increases in the most dangerous superbugs: Acinetobacter up 78 percent, Candida auris up 60 percent, and notorious MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) up 13 percent year over year.

When you’re a patient, which room or bed you’re put in largely determines your risk of getting infected. If the previous occupant had an infection, your danger of getting infected with the same organism goes up 583 percent—almost sixfold, according to Columbia School of Nursing research.

Cleaning is so shoddy that the previous patient’s germs are still lurking.

Unlike the COVID virus, which spreads primarily through the air, the bacterial and fungal organisms terrorizing hospitals are spread by touch and can last for weeks and months on surfaces. Masks are useless against most superbugs.

In Washington, politicians and drug companies are pushing legislation, such as the Pasteur Act, that will incentivize companies to invest in new weapons against superbugs.

“We’re playing with fire if we don’t pass” it soon, said Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.), one of the bill’s sponsors.

Sorry, but that’s a long-term strategy. Patients who need hospitalization today, or this year, can’t wait for drugs that aren’t even in the pipeline yet.

Hospitals should be laser-focused on the strategy that will produce immediate results: rigorous cleaning and disinfection. Yet that is missing from the conversation.

Hospital mattresses are so contaminated with bodily fluids that placing a patient in a bed occupied even 90 days earlier by someone with C. diff (Clostridium difficile, the most common hospital infection) puts the new patient at risk, according to Dr. Lucy Witt of Emory University.

Even fragile newborns are in danger. A staggering 20 percent of surfaces in the neonatal intensive care unit of a Chattanooga, Tennessee, children’s hospital were contaminated with drug-resistant MRSA, according to University of Tennessee–Chattanooga researchers.

Unclean medical equipment is another culprit. Researchers traced an infection outbreak in a hospital burn unit in Galveston, Texas, to a contaminated electrocardiogram wire. The last patient treated with that wire had been discharged 38 days earlier, but the superbug had stayed alive.

These aren’t anecdotes. Hospitals are a germy mess everywhere. A survey of 23 academic medical centers from D.C. northward to Boston by epidemiologists Michael Parry and Philip Carling found that hospital cleaners overlooked more than half the surfaces that are supposed to be cleaned. (Hint: If you have to eat lunch in a hospital room, the safest place to put your sandwich is on the toilet seat, which is almost never overlooked.)

The good news is that cleaning reduces infection rates. Researchers at Rush Medical College in Chicago reduced the spread of a superbug by two-thirds by instructing cleaning staff on which surfaces they were skipping and the importance of drenching surfaces and waiting, rather than a quick spray wipe.

Parry reports that at Stamford Hospital in Connecticut, improved cleaning contributed to “dramatic reductions” in infections, including a 75 percent drop in C. diff.

Mayo Clinic’s Robert Orenstein reduced C. diff by 85 percent in a pilot program by wiping the surfaces around patients’ beds with a bleach wipe once a day. Why isn’t every hospital doing that?

The stakes are too high to settle for the dirty status quo. A hospital patient who contracts a superbug faces a far higher risk of death than another patient with the same medical problem who doesn’t get infected.

Two Johns Hopkins physicians, Cynthia Sears and Fyza Yusuf Shaikh, warn that despite “enormous strides” against cancer in the coming years, “without an equally energetic effort to beat back superbugs,” many cancer patients will still lose their lives.

Beating back the superbugs starts with hospitals cleaning up.

Meanwhile, when you visit a loved one in the hospital, bring bleach wipes and clean the surfaces near their bed. You could be saving their life.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Betsy McCaughey, Ph.D., is a political commentator, constitutional expert, syndicated columnist, and author of several books, including “The Obama Health Law: What It Says and How to Overturn It” and “The Next Pandemic.” She is also a former lieutenant governor of New York.
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