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Preventing hospital infections would save lives—and billions
Jul 8, 2009 11:54 AM

Hospital infection prevention According to the Washington Post, the hospital industry is expected to announce a deal with the Obama Administration today to reduce health care spending by nearly $155 billion as part of a national health reform package. Hospital groups, including American Hospital Association, the Federation of American Hospitals and the Catholic Health Association, have reportedly agreed to smaller payments for Medicare and Medicaid services, and less reimbursement for caring for the uninsured, if and when health reform is enacted.

So far, however, health care reform proposals have not sufficiently addressed a key aspect that would save money and the lives of thousands of patients: Preventing hospital infections. On that note, our own Bill Vaughan, policy analyst for Consumers Union issued the following statement about the deal:

While the expected pledge by hospitals is a step in the right direction, there is a more important pledge patients and consumers need from our hospitals: stop the preventable deaths of 100,000 people a year from hospital acquired infections. According to the Centers for Disease Control, the cost of treating these infections is about $35-$45 billion per year. If even half of this spending was avoided, in over ten years we would have more than the amount of money in this deal.

In their spring letter to the White House pledging savings, the hospital industry said it would do more to fight infection. Today we have no proof that those pledges will result in fewer deaths and injuries. American consumers need to know which hospitals are doing a good job and which are just giving lip service. National health reform should include the public reporting of all hospital infection rates. That is the only way to ensure that the pledges become reality.

An American dies every 5 minutes from a largely preventable infection acquired in a hospital setting. That is the equivalent to a jumbo jet crashing every other day. If we had those kinds of casualties in airplanes every day, either people wouldn’t fly or we would be working on air safety 24 hours a day.

Yet each day these preventable deaths and other life-long injuries continue in our hospitals. We know that these infections are largely preventable—but for too many hospitals, it continues to be business as usual. These deaths, injuries, and wasted billions can be almost totally prevented.

It’s important that hospitals are pledging to save money, but today they should also pledge to save lives. We need to end infection, publicly report on each institution’s infection rate, and save about $40 billion a year in reduced costs of treating infections.

Kevin McCarthy, associate editor

Learn more about Consumers Union’s efforts to prevent hospital infections and medical errors through the Safe Patient Project, and sign the petition to help make medical errors public. And we'd like to hear from you: Have you or a loved one been harmed by a costly hospital error or infection?

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