Acute care hospitals reduced Clostridium difficile infections by 12%, between 2017 and 2018, according to the 2018 National and State Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAI) Progress Report issued by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The “report demonstrates notable progress, yet the threat is still real,” CDC Director Robert Redfield, MD, said at a press briefing.
The reduction of C. Diff. was seen as “significant,”= with 3,669 hospitals reporting 69,648C. difficile infections in 2018, representing a 29% decrease from 2015, according to an article on the Infection Control Today website.
Threats considered urgent are Candida auris, drug-resistant gonorrhea and carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae.
Grounding Healthcare Spaces in Hospitality Principles
UC Davis Health Selects Rudolph and Sletten for Central Utility Plant Expansion
Cape Cod Healthcare Opens Upper 2 Floors of Edwin Barbey Patient Care Pavilion
Building Sustainable Healthcare for an Aging Population
Froedtert ThedaCare Announces Opening of ThedaCare Medical Center-Oshkosh