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Only 6% of U.S. Hospitals Prepared to Receive Ebola Patients

Author: Association for Professionals in Infection Control - Contact: Liz Garman - Email: egarman@apic.org
Published: 2014/10/25
Topic: Ebola Virus - Publications List

Page Content: Synopsis Introduction Main

Synopsis: According to a survey of infection prevention experts at U.S. hospitals only 6 percent are well-prepared to receive a patient with the Ebola virus.

Introduction

Only 6 percent of U.S. hospitals are well-prepared to receive a patient with the Ebola virus, according to a survey of infection prevention experts at U.S. hospitals conducted October 10-15 by the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC).

Main Item

The survey asked APIC's infection preventionist members, "How prepared is your facility to receive a patient with the Ebola virus"

Of the 1,039 U.S.-based respondents working in acute care hospitals, about 6 percent reported their facility was well-prepared, while about 5 percent said it was not prepared.

The remaining responses reported various levels of preparedness in between the two extremes, with the majority (40 percent) indicating they were somewhat prepared. Survey responses were received from hospitals that ranged in size from less than 100 to more than 400 beds.

According to the survey, one in two hospitals (51 percent) had only one or less than one full-time equivalent infection preventionist on staff. Infection preventionists are experts in identifying sources of infections and limiting their transmission in healthcare facilities.

Among hospitals with 0 to 1 infection preventionists on staff, 4 percent felt well-prepared to receive a patient with the Ebola virus, compared to 31 percent of survey respondents with 11 or more infection preventionists on staff.

"We know that many hospitals do not have enough staff dedicated to infection prevention and control," said Jennie Mayfield, BSN, MPH, CIC, president of APIC. "Facilities that are inadequately staffed to begin with are stretched beyond capacity at a time like this. The current crisis demonstrates our lack of surge capacity and should concern everyone. Because our infection preventionist members are having to focus so much attention on Ebola, they are very worried about what other infectious diseases we might be missing. The infection preventionist's skills have never been in more demand."

"The survey highlights the short shrift given to infection prevention at many U.S. hospitals," said Katrina Crist, MBA, APIC Chief Executive Officer. "The Ebola outbreak illustrates why facility-wide infection prevention programs are critical and require adequately trained, staffed, and resourced infection control departments. The unique skill set of the infection preventionist is needed to get out in front of this outbreak and prevent the next public health issue from escalating to a crisis."

According to the CDC, approximately 1 in 25 people in the U.S. get healthcare-associated infections and nearly 75,000 people die each year with these infections, about twice the number who die from auto accidents. Healthcare-associated infections cost the U.S. healthcare system in excess of $30 billion annually. Many healthcare-associated infections can be prevented with proper infection prevention practices.

APIC is calling on healthcare facilities to assess their infection prevention programs by looking at all the care and services provided by the institution and determining the appropriate level of personnel and resources necessary to meet the increased need. APIC is urging facilities to focus on three aspects of infection prevention in order to effectively protect healthcare workers, patients, and the public.

APIC's mission is to create a safer world through prevention of infection. The association's more than 15,000 members direct infection prevention programs that save lives and improve the bottom line for hospitals and other healthcare facilities. APIC advances its mission through patient safety, implementation science, competencies and certification, advocacy, and data standardization. Visit APIC online at www.apic.org

Follow APIC on Twitter: twitter.com/apic and Facebook: www.facebook.com/APICInfectionPreventionandYou

For information on what patients and families can do, visit APIC's Infection Prevention and You website at www.apic.org/infectionpreventionandyou

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