UPMC mold investigation focuses on negative pressure room

Three infected patients were put into a negative pressure room because the ICU was full


Three of the four transplant patients who contracted mold infections at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) hospitals may have become infected because they were put into a “negative pressure” room because the cardiothoracic intensive care unit was full, according to an article on the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette website. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) team concluded in its preliminary report that the only exposure which has been shown to be statistically significant that of the negative pressure room at Presbyterian where the three cardiothoracic patients stayed for long periods during the transplant process.

Of 124 patients who stayed in that ICU from June 2014 to September 2015, the only patients who were infected stayed in the negative pressure room. They contracted mucormycosis, the fungal mold infection.

That appears to violate the CDC’s environmental infection control guidelines, in place since 2003, which say that severely immunocompromised patients should be kept in positive pressure rooms, where the air inside a room is blown out, not in.

Read the article.

 

 



January 8, 2016


Topic Area: Industry News


Recent Posts

Cleanliness in Hospitals: Clinical Priority and Community Perception

EVS managers and communities value cleanliness for complementary reasons: managers for safety and compliance, communities for trust and comfort.


Dana-Farber Receives $50M Gift for Planned Cancer Hospital

A $50 million grant from the Yawkey Foundation will support construction of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute’s planned 450,000-square-foot cancer hospital.


Clarinda Regional Health Center Reports Data Security Incident

On or around December 15, 2025, Clarinda learned that certain data within its network may have been accessed without authorization.


Gaps in Nurses' Environmental Cleaning Knowledge Grow Amid Rising EVS Pressures

Environmental cleaning is crucial in preventing HAIs, but when the responsibility falls to those outside of EVS teams, problems arise. 


Ground Broken on the Southern Nevada Forensic Facility

Construction on the new secure forensic psychiatric hospital is expected to be completed in 2029.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.