November 28th, 2008

Nottingham University Hospitals has paid £10,000 to the family of four-month-old Ellie Behan, who died from a rare bowel condition less than two weeks after being discharged from Queen’s Medical Centre (QMC).
The Nottingham Evening Post reports that Ellie had shown signs of being seriously ill when she vomited green liquid in front of nurses, but the information was not passed on to doctors and the family were told they could take her home later that day.
She then became critically ill and died nine days later.
Ellie had initially been admitted for vomiting green liquid, but she vomited clear liquid in front of the doctor who first saw her, which indicated that her ailment was not as serious. Her case was then passed on to another doctor.
"We are deeply sorry that there were shortcomings in the care she received," commented trust spokesman Stephen Fowlie.
"Ellie should not have been discharged when she first came to the QMC."
The news comes as the Southport Visitor revealed that medical payouts by Southport and Ormskirk NHS Trust increased by 60 per cent over the last 12 months.
Tags: 12 Months, Ailment, Behan, Doctor Who, Ellie, Fowlie, Hospital Trust, Medical Centre, Nine Days, Nottingham Evening Post, Nurses, Ormskirk, Qmc, Shortcomings, Southport And Ormskirk Nhs Trust, Southport Visitor, Spokesman, University Hospitals, Wrongful Discharge
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June 24th, 2008
The superbug MRSA is thriving in busy hospital wards, a new report has claimed.
According to a study by Dr Archie Clements from the University of Queensland in Australia, a combination of excessive bed occupancy and a shortage of nursing staff has led to increased hospital stays and bed blocking which fuels infection rates.
Dr Clements commented: "Hand washing is vital for reduction of MRSA transmission yet many studies show compliance in nurses is low and in doctors even lower."
MRSA Action UK chairman Derek Butler said bed occupancy rates must fall to 65 per cent – equal to that of the Netherlands and Norway.
Around one in three of us carries the Staphylococcus aureus component of MRSA, according to NHS Direct. If this enters the body through a break in the skin it can lead to boils, abscesses or impetigo.
Figures from the Office of National Statistics reveal that 1,652 died as a result of MRSA in 2006.

Tags: Archie, Bed Occupancy, Boils Abscesses, Compliance, Derek Butler, Doctors, Dr Clements, Hand Washing, Hospital Wards, Mrsa, Norway, Nurses, Occupancy Rates, Office Of National Statistics, Queensland Australia, Staphylococcus Aureus, Superbug, Uk Chairman, University Of Queensland, University Queensland
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