Most Popular Stories
- Hospital finance impacted by hidden provisions of Senate health reform bill
- Most CT scans may be unnecessary
- NC Medicaid program $160M over budget
- Healthy Choices: Nine Healthcare Bloggers Worth a Click
- Early intervention for autism shown to be effective
- Uncompensated care, underpayments to hospitals continue to climb
Featured Jobs
-
Pediatrician Job in California
StaffPointe, LLC - near San Francisco, CA -
Rehabilitation Director Job for California
StaffPointe, LLC - near Los Angeles, CA -
Physical Therapy Assistant
Makro Health - Uvalde -
Hospitalist Job in Missouri
StaffPointe, LLC - Kansas City, MO -
Neurology Job in South Dakota
StaffPointe, LLC - east, SD
Events
- Harvard Business School 7th Healthcare Conference
January 30, 2010
Paid Research Reports
- Pricing and Reimbursement in Key Asia Pacific Markets
- Delivery Mechanisms for Large Molecule Drugs: Successes and failures of leading technologies and key drivers for market success
- The Cardiovascular Market Outlook to 2013: Competitive landscape, global market analysis and pipeline analysis
- Intellectual Property and Outsourcing in China: Minimizing risk whilst maximizing return on investment
- Health Care Equipment & Supplies: Global Industry Guide
- 2009 Trends to Watch: Healthcare Technology
FEATURES >> YouTube | Top acute-care hospitals | Women in Health IT | Top BlackBerry Apps | Commentary
TOPICS >> Stimulus | Health Reform | CMS News | Finance | EMRs | Mobile Healthcare | Hospital Leadership Blog
Free Newsletter
FierceHealthcare is the leading source of healthcare management news for healthcare industry executives. Join 50,000+ healthcare industry insiders who get FierceHealthcare via daily email. Sign up today!
Popular Topics
- Medicare
- health plans
- Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
- Insurance
- Electronic Medical Records (EMRs)
- Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
- Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
- Medicaid
- American Medical Association (AMA)
- healthcare system
- health reform
- prescription drugs
- pharmaceutical companies
Hospitals screen incoming patients for MRSA
Hospitals are continuing their war against methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), battling a worrisome new trend in which patients actually enter the hospital with a "community strain" version of the bug rather than picking it up as an inpatient. The efforts supplement newly-aggressive programs fighting in-house MRSA infections. A growing number of hospitals are making big-bucks investments in new "search and destroy" programs hoping to nip MRSA in the bud. Hospitals like the Chicago area's Evanston Northwestern and the VA hospitals are spending $25,000 to $35,000 for testing facilities and $25 per test to detect MRSA cases. Evanston Northwestern is spending $600,000 to $1 million per year to test roughly 40,000 patients, but sees it as a fair trade-off given that MRSA can add $30,000 to treatment costs. This year Evanston cut down MRSA infection rates from an average of 100+ infections to about 50. At the VA, its 139 hospitals have seen similar results, cutting MRSA rates by 50 percent to 60 percent. Yet another example comes from the University of Maryland, which has cut MRSA rates by 30 percent by testing all ICU patients and all patients who have recently been an inpatient elsewhere.
To learn more about hospitals' search-and-destroy MRSA programs:
- read this USA Today article
Related Articles:
New CDC guidelines target drug-resistant infections. Report
MRSA-CA danger to healthcare workers. Report
Study: Disinfectant cuts down on MRSA. Report
Drug-resistant superbugs drive blockbuster antibacterials. Report
Related Stories
- Non-hospital MRSA more dangerous
- Study: MRSA infecting up to 5 percent of patients
- IHI launches hospital injury reduction effort
- NY hospital worker exposes hundreds to TB
- VA program slashes MRSA infection rates
- Poor hygiene, controls increase hospital infections
- Trend: MRSA growing more common in children
- Aggressive MRSA screening for health workers recommended
- CA hospitals must report serious staph cases
- New MRSA strain strikes men in San Fran, Boston
Comments
My spouse died, last year, in Baltimore Specialty Hospital as a result of MRSA. I am pleased to see testing being implimented to reduce risk of MRSA.
Bob Watson
Post new comment
Home
| Subscribe | Advertise | Mobile Edition | RSS |
Privacy
| Site Map | List in Marketplace | Supplier MarketplaceTHE FIERCEMARKETS NETWORKFierceFinance | FierceFinanceIT | FierceComplianceIT | FierceHealthcare | FierceHealthFinance | FierceHealthIT | Hospital Impact | FierceMobileHealthcare | FierceCIO | FierceCIO:TechWatch | FierceContentManagement | FierceMobileIT | FierceGovernmentIT | FierceBiotech | FierceBiotech Research | FiercePharma | FierceVaccines | FierceBiotechIT | FiercePharma Manufacturing | FierceIPTV | FierceOnlineVideo | FierceTelecom | FierceVoIP | FierceBroadbandWireless | FierceDeveloper | FierceMobileContent | FierceWireless | FierceWireless:Europe© 2009 FierceMarkets, Inc. All rights reserved. |
![]() |





