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Single rooms only to beat NHS superbugs



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Published Date: 29 June 2008
ALL new hospitals in Scotland are to be built with private rooms for every patient in a bid to halt the spread of deadly superbugs.



Traditional wards will be phased out to reduce the risks of patients catching potentially fatal hospital-acquired infections such as MRSA and Clostridium difficile.

The move follows an outbreak of C diff that caused the deaths of nine p
atients at the Vale of Leven Hospital and contributed to the deaths of nine more, while five babies in a special care unit in Paisley have tested positive for MRSA.

But experts warned last night that the single-room policy would increase the cost of building hospitals by around 10%, as well as raising running costs. There is also a debate over whether private rooms will significantly cut infection rates.

The new building for the Southern General Hospital in Glasgow, which has more than 1,000 beds and is due to open in 2014, will contain private rooms only. Health Secretary Nicola Sturgeon told Scotland on Sunday: "We are very keen to move to single wards."

Charles Saunders, chairman of the BMA's Scottish consultants committee, said: "Single-bed rooms are better for infection control, for patient privacy and (recovery]."

But Professor Allyson Pollock, head of the Centre for International Public Health Policy at the University of Edinburgh, said: "There is no strong research evidence that moving to single rooms is conducive to health and better outcomes or reducing the infection rate. Single rooms do not deal with hospital hygiene measures."

Andrew McLeman, a surveyor who has overseen large building projects, said a hospital with single rooms would cost around 10% more to build.

"It would be a less efficient use of space, would need more land and more circulation room," he said.





The full article contains 302 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 28 June 2008 11:09 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Hospital superbugs
 
1

Fifi la Bonbon,

29/06/2008 00:37:05
But Professor Allyson Pollock, head of the Centre for Widshing It Was Still The Sixties at the University of Edinburgh, said: "mither mumble moan cavil complain grumble groan quail quibble...." same as she always does about everything.

It would be nice for people to have single rooms. Get over it and stop whingeing.
2

Boy Wonder,

29/06/2008 09:49:45
I have said time and again ... the problem in our hospitals are the unchecked visitors ... and kids. They carry all sorts of germs through doors that are not locked and infect and reinfect patients all over the place.

To start with ... stop the kids under 16 from visiting. They are walking germ-factories!
3

Suzi B,

29/06/2008 17:15:49
#3 I'm with you on that, but maybe kids under 9. The older ones are just as likely to be as clean as adults because if you haven't learned to wash your hands by 9 it is unlikely you ever will.

Single rooms are a great idea. I'm a nurse and midwife and I think that it would remind staff to wash their hands between patients, where going from bed to bed, it is easier for people to forget if they are in a hurry. Nurses are used to people in single rooms being barrier nursed or reverse barrier nursed in case of infections so they know immediately to wash their hands on entering and exiting a single room.
I just hope that they are going to build en suite bathrooms because communal bathrooms are absolutely minging in hospitals. I could tell you all stories but it would put you off your tea.



4

tilda,

alexandria 29/06/2008 17:22:39
Single rooms may help contain infection but won't necessarily be healthy.Iam a nurse in a rehab ward with a mixture of single and 4 bedded wards.Often the patients in the single rooms become withdrawn and only start to improve when moved.Unfortunately hospitals look after individuals and no one size fits all solution ever works.
5

Suzi B,

29/06/2008 19:33:54
#5 Tilda. I agree about people in single rooms often becoming withdrawn after a time and improving with company, but rehab is slightly different from an acute surgical ward in terms of infection risk.
6

Kitti Kat,

PA 29/06/2008 20:47:25
Difficult to believe that in this day and age, you still have wards. our hospitals (at least where I live) have either private or two beds to a room. I have been in private rooms most of the time and welcome them. No noisy roomies and their families, phones ringing, tv's blasting. I have never been ignored and our hospitals have nurse patient advocates who really look after any concerns the patient or family may have. Relatives from the UK were very impressed when they visited my husband in the hospital. They remarked how clean it was and about the great care along with good food the hospital had. #6 is correct--rehab is a lot diferent than a surgical unit.
7

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 29/06/2008 21:23:03

Boy Wonder!! ~3,

How DARE YOU Blame the children!

More like the,..'Dirty Old Codgers',...

That 'Sneeze and Spit' all over the place! and have not washed themselves since World War 2!
8

JennyA,

Scotland 30/06/2008 21:53:42
I got the C.diff bug because I was put into an open ward with patients who had diarrhoea. There were no cleanliness issues and the staff DID observe infection control procedures. Yes, it is true that I would have missed the company of other patients in a single room; but I would have been discharged sooner. I think that single rooms for all patients is the best way to combat the spread of these devastating hospital bugs. At the moment there are simply not enough single rooms to isolate every case of C.diff and MRSA.

 

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