As Anxiety Increases, Agency Scrambles to Address Concerns of Health Workers
- Duration: 4:00
- Updated: 09 Oct 2014
Since a Liberian man tested positive for Ebola in Dallas a week ago and officials announced on Monday that a nurse in Spain had been infected by the virus there, calls have been pouring into the from doctors and nurses wanting help in protecting themselves and their employees from the disease. Associations of infection specialists, hospital care managers and other health providers are also calling. “Before Dallas, we had about 15 calls a day from clinicians,” said Abbigail Tumpey, an agency spokeswoman. “After Dallas, it’s been about 150 calls a day, just into the C. D. C. information line. ”Many want training on protection strategies, so the agency has scheduled two nationwide conference calls — one this week for public health agencies and another next week for hospitals and clinicians. But at Doctors Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, standard precautions are considered adequate, said Dr. John Casey, an emergency physician. “The basic rule is ‘If it’s wet and you didn’t make it, don’t touch it,’ ” he said. “Essentially, that is protection against Ebola. It doesn’t really take much more than that. ”Dr. Casey said that hospital workers wear more protective gear when entering the rooms of patients with bed bugs than they would for an Ebola case. “For the most part, the biggest precaution we can take is asking people about travel history if they have symptoms,” he said. But National Nurses United, the country’s largest union and professional association of nurses, contended that hospitals were not doing enough. It said that in a survey of more than 1,600 of its members, 75 percent said their hospitals had not informed them of a policy for dealing with Ebola patients. “There’s discussion around, ‘Oh you don’t want to create hysteria and panic,’ ” said Bonnie Castillo, director of the organization’s registered nurse response network, which sends nurses to disaster sites. “But the way you prevent panic is to be prepared. ”She said the American Hospital Association should require all hospitals to provide hazardous-material suits and hands-on training. In a statement, Dr. Ken Anderson, chief operating officer of the hospital association’s research arm, said the organization was urging hospitals to “meet the latest C. D. C. guidance and best practices to protect health care workers. ”Some hospitals, including in New York City, are running drills in which people pretending to be patients with Ebola symptoms enter the hospital. Hospital staff members, unaware that these are fictional patients, then go through the process of diagnosing, admitting and planning treatment, protecting themselves and other patients in the process. Last week, in Louisville, Ky. , one of the 96 hospitals run by Catholic Health Initiatives, a nonprofit health system, conducted such a drill with a patient posing as a worker returning from Africa. Aaron Williams, the system’s national director of infection prevention, said that for months now, the group’s hospitals had b
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Since a Liberian man tested positive for Ebola in Dallas a week ago and officials announced on Monday that a nurse in Spain had been infected by the virus there, calls have been pouring into the from doctors and nurses wanting help in protecting themselves and their employees from the disease. Associations of infection specialists, hospital care managers and other health providers are also calling. “Before Dallas, we had about 15 calls a day from clinicians,” said Abbigail Tumpey, an agency spokeswoman. “After Dallas, it’s been about 150 calls a day, just into the C. D. C. information line. ”Many want training on protection strategies, so the agency has scheduled two nationwide conference calls — one this week for public health agencies and another next week for hospitals and clinicians. But at Doctors Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, standard precautions are considered adequate, said Dr. John Casey, an emergency physician. “The basic rule is ‘If it’s wet and you didn’t make it, don’t touch it,’ ” he said. “Essentially, that is protection against Ebola. It doesn’t really take much more than that. ”Dr. Casey said that hospital workers wear more protective gear when entering the rooms of patients with bed bugs than they would for an Ebola case. “For the most part, the biggest precaution we can take is asking people about travel history if they have symptoms,” he said. But National Nurses United, the country’s largest union and professional association of nurses, contended that hospitals were not doing enough. It said that in a survey of more than 1,600 of its members, 75 percent said their hospitals had not informed them of a policy for dealing with Ebola patients. “There’s discussion around, ‘Oh you don’t want to create hysteria and panic,’ ” said Bonnie Castillo, director of the organization’s registered nurse response network, which sends nurses to disaster sites. “But the way you prevent panic is to be prepared. ”She said the American Hospital Association should require all hospitals to provide hazardous-material suits and hands-on training. In a statement, Dr. Ken Anderson, chief operating officer of the hospital association’s research arm, said the organization was urging hospitals to “meet the latest C. D. C. guidance and best practices to protect health care workers. ”Some hospitals, including in New York City, are running drills in which people pretending to be patients with Ebola symptoms enter the hospital. Hospital staff members, unaware that these are fictional patients, then go through the process of diagnosing, admitting and planning treatment, protecting themselves and other patients in the process. Last week, in Louisville, Ky. , one of the 96 hospitals run by Catholic Health Initiatives, a nonprofit health system, conducted such a drill with a patient posing as a worker returning from Africa. Aaron Williams, the system’s national director of infection prevention, said that for months now, the group’s hospitals had b
- published: 09 Oct 2014
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