Monday, March 23, 2009

PD helps fight MRSA



The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) and the Plexus Institute (Plexus) today announce results from an analysis of a multifaceted methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) prevention program that employed positive deviance (PD), a novel approach to social and behavioral change, to trigger significant reductions in MRSA incidence ranging from 26 to 62 percent at participating hospitals.

In addition, as MRSA rates dropped, the hospitals saw a decline in the proportion of Staphylococcus aureus infections caused by methicillin-resistant bacteria, signifying that hospitals can make headway in the fight against drug-resistant superbugs.

“Reports of successful multicenter interventions to reduce endemic antimicrobial resistance problems among U.S. hospitals are extremely rare,” says John A. Jernigan, MD, MS, an epidemiologist at the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and part of the CDC team that conducted the analysis. “These extremely encouraging findings add to a growing body of evidence that hospitals can make a difference in their endemic MRSA rates, and further might be able to improve the chances that infected patients have the best possible treatment options available. It shows that hospitals can make an important difference in antimicrobial resistance even at a time when the availability of new antibiotics has stagnated.”

Read more at plexusinstitute.org.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

MRSA on CBS Evening News

Jasper Palmer, an escort servicve worker at Albert Einstein Medical Center demonstrates how to safely and efficiently remove the gowns and gloves worn while caring for patients in isolation because of contageous infections. His method also reduces trash volume. Doctors and nurses tell how they used Positive Deviance working together to protect patients from MRSA infections.


Read the complete story at cbs.com