The Connecticut Department of Public Health has released a report on a class of infections acquired in Connecticut acute-care hospitals, according to a department news release.
The report, which is the first of its kind, presents data on central line-associated bloodstream infections. Connecticut's 30 acute-care hospitals are required to report these infections to DPH using standard definitions and protocols. The report compares hospital data collected from Oct. 1, 2009-Sept. 20, 2010 to the latest available national benchmark data collected from 2006-2008.
Overall, the number of central line-associated bloodstream infections in Connecticut is 29 percent lower than the national benchmark, based on data reported to the CDC by healthcare facilities across the country. Among Connecticut hospitals, two facilities have an infection rate that is statistically lower than their national benchmark. The remainder of hospitals show no statistically significant differences from the national benchmark.
Read the news release about central line-associated bloodstream infections at Connecticut hospitals.
Read other coverage about hospital infections:
- Johns Hopkins Study: Electronic Faucets Unsafe for Use in Hospital Setting
- Infection Outbreak at Alabama Hospitals Leads to 9 Patient Deaths
- VA Patient Outcomes Data Motivate Change at Hospitals
The report, which is the first of its kind, presents data on central line-associated bloodstream infections. Connecticut's 30 acute-care hospitals are required to report these infections to DPH using standard definitions and protocols. The report compares hospital data collected from Oct. 1, 2009-Sept. 20, 2010 to the latest available national benchmark data collected from 2006-2008.
Overall, the number of central line-associated bloodstream infections in Connecticut is 29 percent lower than the national benchmark, based on data reported to the CDC by healthcare facilities across the country. Among Connecticut hospitals, two facilities have an infection rate that is statistically lower than their national benchmark. The remainder of hospitals show no statistically significant differences from the national benchmark.
Read the news release about central line-associated bloodstream infections at Connecticut hospitals.
Read other coverage about hospital infections:
- Johns Hopkins Study: Electronic Faucets Unsafe for Use in Hospital Setting
- Infection Outbreak at Alabama Hospitals Leads to 9 Patient Deaths
- VA Patient Outcomes Data Motivate Change at Hospitals