Nunn’s objection, and that of Henry Marsh and 1000′s of other physicians, is not that they are getting needed to abide by principles, but that individuals principles are entirely meaningless. It is the utter hypocrisy and lunacy surrounding infection management in the NHS that we locate so galling. In reality, I’d go so far to say that present policy is in fact unsafe, as it obscures the true troubles in tackling hospital-acquired infections.
Along with hand-washing, the only other variable regularly implicated in hospital-acquired infections is bed-occupancy costs. The faster the turnaround of patients, the better the strain on beds and the larger the infection price. This link was emphasised in a report by the Division of Health and published virtually a decade in the past, and yet it was ignored by ministers simply because it did not fit in with its plans for the NHS to reduce hospital beds and streamline companies.
But the bare-under-the-elbows policy serves an additional perform. Increasingly, the dress code is used by managers as a way of forcing physicians – the standard figures of authority in hospitals, who are frequently seen as a risk due to the fact of their understanding and expertise – to observe the guidelines. It is a stick with which to beat clinicians, a way for managers to flex their muscle groups. And it has had unintended consequences.
Under this policy, white coats have been banned. Physicians now do not look “smart” on the ward – no ties, no lengthy-sleeved shirts and no fits. Numerous argue that they have lost their “presence” in hospitals, and patients can no longer recognize them. Even though it is true that white coats can harbour infectious organisms, in Hong Kong, exactly where they are still common uniform, the rates of hospital-acquired infection are substantially reduce than in British hospitals, as they are in other European nations.
It is not the white coats that are crucial, but the frequency and temperature of washing. Stephanie Dancer, a consultant microbiologist, wrote in the British Healthcare Journal last year that there was no proof that banning white coats had diminished infection prices in hospitals. Surely, white coats are created to be washed at large temperatures, so I employed to boil mine, even though I never ever wash my function clothes above 30 degrees, or they shrink. You do not need to have to be a brain surgeon to see that recent infection-management policies make no sense at all.
I wish the Saatchi Bill success
Congratulations to Maurice Saatchi – his Health-related Innovation Bill, which aims to cost-free doctors to try progressive strategies or drugs on individuals when all else has failed, has passed its first hurdle in Parliament following a campaign, strongly supported by this paper, that has produced widespread public support. It will now proceed to a 2nd reading in the House of Lords.
Issues that the Bill will turn into a “quack’s charter” have been tackled by Lord Saatchi, who has amended it. The Bill now makes a clear distinction in between “responsible innovation” and “reckless experimentation”. Any experimental procedures would have to be approved by a team of specialists and a “responsible officer”.
Possibly it will outcome in a remedy for cancer, possibly not. But unless we enable physicians to innovate, we’ll in no way know. I want the Bill every success in its second studying. For much more detail, see medicalinnovationbill.co.uk.
Don’t rush to blame the NHS for drips
The instances last week of newborn infants contaminated by contaminated intravenous drips have, rightly, prompted headlines and outrage.
The infants, some of them premature, were also poorly to be fed by mouth and needed a food supply delivered by way of their bloodstream.
There has now been at least one particular confirmed death from septicaemia linked to the iv drips.
Yes, the infants and their households have been tragically let down. But, whilst some headlines reported that the babies were ‘’poisoned by NHS drips”, it need to be stressed again that the NHS is not responsible for the manufacture of these products. The drips were presented by a personal company, ITH Pharma. Obligation for this tragedy will be established by the recent government investigation.
Max Pemberton’s most current guide, ‘The Medical professional Will See You Now’ is published by Hodder. To buy a copy, phone Telegraph Books on 0844 871 1515
No wonder dress codes have doctors up in (bare) arms
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