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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page paper that begins with data regarding the incidence of infections in American hospitals each year. The essay reviews four articles on this topic, reporting the strategies to prevent infections. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGinfc9.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
School, 2008). Of those, more than 90,000 will die from complications related to that infection (Harvard Medical School, 2008). These infections cost Americans an extra $5 billion in healthcare costs
each year (Harvard Medical School, 2008). This is alarming data. The one place people should be safe can actually be a deathtrap. Some of the more common infections patients
contract in the hospital include pneumonia that is associated with ventilators, central line blood stream infections, infections at the surgical location, urinary tract infections, and diarrhea (Phillipchuk, 2007). Besides the
most common causes of transmissions of infections, e.g., non-sterilized hands, airborne pathogens can cause infections (Sehulster and Chinn, 2003). While these airborne-related infections are less common than other ways infections
are transmitted, the possibility should be taken seriously (Sehulster and Chinn, 2003). Several major healthcare organizations joined together to address this issue in a publication entitled the Compendium of Strategies
to Prevent Healthcare-Associated Infections in Acute Care Hospitals (Harvard Medical School, 2008). The document describes strategies that hospitals need to take to drastically reduce the number of infections patients get
(Harvard Medical School, 2008). The Center that administers Medicare and Medicaid stopped reimbursing hospitals for the costs associated with any infection a patient contracted in that facility (Harvard Medical School,
2008). This should be a good incentive for all health care institutions to do a better job of controlling and preventing infections. This problem is not confined to the United
States. Other countries are also facing the same issue of patients contracting infections while in the hospital. Lusardi (2007) reports that nursing students are taught strategies to prevent infections in
the very beginning of their training but research suggests that the emphasis they place on hand hygiene diminishes greatly by their third year in the field. Some researchers have suggested
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