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Canada: budget cuts have contributed to spread of super-bug
By Guy Charron
30 August 2004
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Reports published in succeeding issues of the Canadian Medical
Association Journal (CMAJ) assert that government cost-cutting
has led to a deterioration in hygiene at Canadas hospitals
and that this in turn has contributed to an alarming rise in Clostridium
Difficile bacteria infections and fatalities
In early August, the CMAJ published a report by Dr.
Jacques Pepin, an infectious disease specialist at Sherbrooke
University Hospital (CHUS), which said C. difficile had
been tied to the deaths of more than 100 hundred persons at the
Quebec hospital in the previous 18 months.
In the journals July issue a team of specialists in infectious
diseases reported that at least 79 persons hospitalized in Montreal
and 4 in Calgary had died over roughly the same period after becoming
infected with C. difficile.
C. difficile is a bacterium that flourishes in the intestinal
tract, causing violent diarrhea and, in severe cases, ablation
of the intestine and death. Those whom it attacks are generally
elderly hospital patients who are being treated with antibiotics
for another infection such as pneumonia. The antibiotics weaken
the intestines beneficial bacterial flora, allowing C.
difficile, which is resistant to most antibiotics, to take
root and proliferate.
Pepins report shows that there has been a sharp rise
in C. difficile infections. Whereas in 1991-92 the two
hospitals that now comprise the CHUS reported 169 cases, a decade
later the annual total was 244. By 2003 the number of infections
had risen to 390 and in just the first six months of this year
there were 325.
Data from hospitals elsewhere in Canada indicate this is part
of a larger trend. In 2003, the six Montreal hospitals for which
there is information reported more than 1,400 cases of C. difficile
and Calgarys hospitals reported 1,100 cases in
2000-01.
According to Dr. Pepin, this is the worst epidemic of
hospital-acquired infections that weve had.
It seems likely, warns Dr. Pepin, that before
the end of 2004, more than 1000 patients will have died within
30 days of a diagnosis of CDAD [C. difficile associated
diarrhea] in the province of Quebec. If this proves true,
almost half of these deaths would have occurred in the last two
years.
The Quebec government has effectively dismissed Dr. Pepins
report as scare-mongering. Liberal Health Minister Paul Couillard
told Canadian Press, One hundred people died while having
the bacteria in them. It doesnt mean that their deaths were
due to the bacteria.
Dr. Pepin has never suggested all the deaths were attributable
to the superbug C. difficile. Many of those
who became infected were already gravely ill. But he is outraged
at the official indifference to his report. I myself saw
some of these patients. It is clear that a large majority of these
deaths were directly caused by C. difficile.
Significantly, Dr. Pepins report shows that as C.
difficile has become more prevalent, it has also become more
virulent. Whereas in 1991 just 5 percent of patients died within
30 days of being identified as having C. difficile, in
2001 the morality rate was 14 percent.
One reason the government has been so quick to downplay the
significance of C. difficile is that researchers have drawn
a direct link between its spread and the massive cuts that the
federal Liberal and provincial Liberal, Parti Québécois,
Conservative and NDP governments have made to Canadas health
care system. Hygiene has been compromised as hospitals skimp on
supplies, push patients into overcrowded wards, and reduce their
staffs.
According to the report C. difficile: A formidable
foe published in the July CMAJ, In many institutions,
housekeeping staff has been reduced while nursing workloads have
increased. C. difficile is particularly difficult to eradicate
from surfaces and equipment. Compliance with hand hygiene has
been shown to decrease as workloads increase. Decreased compliance
with isolation protocols along with the increased environmental
spore burden could have a synergistic effect in promoting C.
difficile cross-infection.
The current facilities in many hospitals are antiquated
and contain few single or isolation rooms. Wards and emergency
departments have become more crowded, and bed turnover is rapid.
This makes containment of C. difficile exceedingly difficult,
especially among patients with fecal incontinence. Sharing of
toilet facilities between patients in multi-bed rooms is still
occurring.
According to Dr. Pepin there are departments here at
CHUS where you can have forty patients sharing one or two beds.
... The result is that in some of these old buildings, the sanitary
conditions are intolerable. I mean, its indecent.
Nor are these problems limited to Quebec. Listening to
stories from Montreal is, frankly, scary, says Dr. Allison
McGeer, an infectious disease specialist at Torontos Mount
Sinai Hospital. It could happen in Torontotomorrow.
There are important parallels between the spread of C. difficile
and the 2003 SARS crisis that caused more deaths in Toronto than
any other city, region or country outside East Asia. Most of those
who died had contracted SARS while in hospital either as patients
or health care workers.
An Ontario government-appointed inquiry, while whitewashing
the role played by the federal Liberal and Ontario Conservative
governments in slashing Ontarios health budgets, conceded
that the spread of SARS was facilitated by the weakness of the
provinces public health units, hospital overcrowding, aged
infrastructure, lack of time and facilities for proper staff hygiene,
and the refusal to hire nurses full-time. (Nurses, who to make
ends meet were forced to work part-time at several hospitals,
inadvertently spread SARS from one Toronto hospital to another.)
See Also:
Canada: Budget cuts
played pivotal role in SARS crisis
[24 May 2004]
SARS outbreak exposes
public health decay in Toronto
[25 April 2004]
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