Region: Government      Corporate
You are not logged in    Login
IDS Emergencymanagement
  The Information Resource for the Emergency Management Industry!
Browse Emergency Products & Suppliers By Category
Browse Emergency Whitepapers By Sector
Browse Emergency Management Events By Category
Participation Options
Free Listing
Interested In Exhibiting?
Submit Events
About IDS Emergency
Submit News
Emergency Management Newsletter
News ReleaseClick Here to view News Releases
Superbug Campaign to Target Antibiotic Overuse
News Source
Christian Today
January 09, 2008
Click HereView Participation Packages
Click Here
Add paper
   

Family doctors and the public are to be reminded not to overuse antibiotics in a campaign to fight the spread of superbug infections, Health Secretary Alan Johnson said on Wednesday.

The nationwide publicity campaign, launched next month, will stress that antibiotics are ineffective against many common ailments and that indiscrimate use can boost the spread of antibiotic-resistant infections.

"The use of antibiotics have saved countless lives, but antibiotics do not work on most coughs, colds and sore throats and their unnecessary use can leave the body susceptible to gut infections like Clostridium difficile," said Johnson.

The government is under pressure to show success in reducing the level of superbug infections such as C. difficile and MRSA in NHS hospitals.

A 50 million pound ward-by-ward deep clean of hospitals in England is under way and medics have been ordered to wear short-sleeved tunics to prevent accidental spread of infection.

The antibiotics campaign comes as hospitals decide how to spend an extra 270 million pounds a year allocated in government spending plans to improve cleanliness and reduce superbug infections.

Some 45 million pounds of the additional annual funding can be spent on specialist staff.

Johnson said this money would allow every hospital trust in England to hire two infection control nurses, two isolation nurses and an antimicrobial pharmacist.

NHS bodies have been told they must keep MRSA bloodstream infections at less than half the level in 2003 and must also nationally reduce C. difficile infections by 30 percent.

Hospitals which fail to meet the C. difficile target face funding cuts and will not be able to apply for the greater financial freedoms offered by foundation trust status.

Hospitals are due to start MRSA screening of patients coming for non-emergency procedures from April, and for all emergency admissions over the next three years.

Those found with MRSA would be put into isolation units.

But the opposition Conservatives said the government had failed to invest in sufficient isolation facilities.

"There is no point in having more nurses if they don't have the resources and facilities they need to do their work properly," said Conservative Health Spokesman Andrew Lansley.

Other News
Intel Dives into Medical Market with Home Health Monitors
HSE Publishes Health and Safety Statistics for 2007/08
AOPA ASF Launches Free Online Safety Course
RONCO Expands its Safety Line
Outsourcing Safety? A Growing Trend, Indeed
 

Industry IDS, Inc.
DELEGATES
13477
Conference Sectors  Case Studies  List of Papers  Exhibition Sectors  Vendor Presentation  List of Exhibitors  Industry News  Sponsors  All Exhibitors  All Papers  Sitemap  Registration Links ]

 :: IDS Plastics :: IDS Water ::IDS Packaging::IDS Publishing/Media ::IDS Healthcare Management ::IDS Environment::IDS Power/Energy::  

Industry IDS, Inc. – Online Tradeshow, Exhibition, & Buyers Guide Solutions