Saturday, January 21, 2012

Deep clean for Belfast hospital where three babies have died

Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteria

Pseudomonas bacteria can cause infections in the chest, blood and urine
 
 
 
 
 
 
The neo-natal ward at Belfast's Royal Jubilee Hospital is undergoing a deep clean this weekend, following the deaths of three babies from a bacterial infection.
The three infants died over a two-week period this month, having contracted the Pseudomonas infection.
A fourth baby is now being treated and all others in the unit are being tested to see if they have the infection.
The infection can live on surfaces for several days, one expert told the BBC.
Infection risk Pseudomonas can cause breathing difficulties and tissue damage.
Three other babies at the hospital were diagnosed with the infection. Two recovered, while the other died of an unrelated cause.
It has also emerged that in December at Altnagelvin Hospital in Londonderry, a baby died of a different strain of the bacterial infection.
GP Dr Sarah Jarvis told BBC News the infection was a risk to "the very very young, the very very old, burns victims or cancer victims".
She said the infection can take hold in areas such as sinks and in water pipes with stagnant water. The bacteria can live for several days on surfaces but can be destroyed by vigorous hand-washing.
Royal Jubilee Maternity Hospital in BelfastShe urged all visitors to make use of hygiene facilities when they visited the wards, as many people unwittingly brought infections into them.
A helpline has been set up to deal with concerns
Professor Hugh Pennington, a bacteriologist from Aberdeen University, said identifying the source of the of the infection would not be easy.
"This is very, very difficult detective work basically because one has to look at all sorts of possibilities," he said.
"This is a bug which of course is very common in nature so just finding it doesn't necessarily mean that that's the cause of the problem, you know, that you've identified it."
The Department of Health in Northern Ireland said there was no evidence to link the current outbreak in the Royal Hospital with that of the incident at Altnagelvin in December.
It said all necessary control measures were put in place at the time and "the infection was eradicated".
A helpline has been set up for parents on 028 90 635 389.
The chief executive of the Belfast Health Trust earlier said a full investigation was being carried out.
However, Colm Donaghy said that the "first priority is the safety of the babies and ensuring the work that we do keeps babies safe".
 

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