Data on hospital-acquired infections, other conditions online
Health News

Data on hospital-acquired infections, other conditions online


The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has posted information about hospital-acquired conditions on its website, and The Courier-Journal not only has a story about it today, it has an easily searchable database of Kentucky hospitals.

This is not information that the Kentucky Hospital Association or the American Hospital Association wants online, at least in its current form. ?You have to look at the totality of the care. And these little snapshots that CMS wants to pick out are very misleading,? KHA Senior Vice President Nancy Galvagni told C-J reporter Patrick Howington. She said the data don't allow for differences between hospitals, such as specialities, that may cause higher rates of acquired conditions.

However, Doug Leonard, president of the Indiana Hospital Association, told Howington that the industry needs to ?embrace transparency. Sometimes we don't like the results of that, but I think transparency is good for us and good for the public.? Dr. Kevin Kavanagh of Somerset, chairman of the nonprofit group Health Watch USA, "said the data's greatest value may be to help hospitals spot areas that need improvement, rather than to help patients choose between hospitals," Howington writes. "In fact, a hospital shown as having a high complication rate 'may be the safest hospital to go to, because they were under pressure to get the problem corrected.'" (Read more)

The conditions tracked are trauma such as falls, infections from catheters, bedsores, poor blood-sugar control for diabetics, foreign objects left in bodies, air or gas bubbles in blood vessels, and transfusions of the wrong blood type.




- New Rule Will Improve Reporting Of Antibiotic-resistant Infections In Health-care Facilities, Which Are Getting Worse In Kentucky
By Melissa Patrick Kentucky Health News FRANKFORT, Ky. ? Kentucky will have a new weapon, in the form of data, to fight infections acquired in hospitals and other health-care facilities, with legislative approval of a regulation that changes...

- Activist Seeking Stronger Rules On Reporting Health-care Infections Says Industry Lobbyists Misled Legislative Committee To Kill Bill
"Health-care industry witnesses appeared to have presented incorrect information" to the House Health and Welfare Committee in speaking March 6 against House Bill 460, which would require all health-care facilities to report infections associated with...

- 100 Kentucky Hospitals Join Network To Improve Patient Safety, Fight Hospital-acquired Conditions Such As Infections
To help hospitals reduce preventable readmissions and hospital-acquired infections, 100 of Kentucky's 131 hospitals have joined the Kentucky Hospital Association's hospital engagement network. The group's goal is to help hospitals find ways...

- Kentucky Needs System To Track Hospital Infections, Doctor Says
Kentucky is in need of a single, accurate system that tracks hospital-acquired infections in order to improve health care and receive state and federal funding, an op-ed piece in The Courier-Journal contends. (Hospitals call these "healthcare-associated...

- Legislator Wants To Make Hospitals, Health Care Facilities Report Infections Acquired By Patients Under Their Care
In the face of strong opposition from Kentucky hospitals, a Democratic legislator has filed a bill that would require all health-care facilities to report the incidence of infections acquired by patients while under their care, the Lexington Herald-Leader's...



Health News








.