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HJ0005 |
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LRB095 03995 DRJ 24028 r |
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| HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, Hospital infections, which account for an |
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| estimated 100,000 deaths every year, kill more than five times |
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| as many Americans as AIDS; and
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| WHEREAS, The federal Centers for Disease Control and |
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| Prevention (C.D.C.), which are calling for voluntary blood |
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| testing of all patients to stem the spread of AIDS, have chosen |
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| not to recommend a test that is essential to stop the spread of |
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| another killer sweeping through our nation's hospitals: |
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| M.R.S.A., or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; the |
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| C.D.C. guidelines to prevent hospital infections, released in |
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| October 2006, conspicuously omit universal testing of patients |
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| for M.R.S.A.; and
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| WHEREAS, The C.D.C.'s omission is unfortunate; research |
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| shows that the only way to prevent M.R.S.A. infections is to |
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| identify which patients bring the bacteria into the hospital; |
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| the M.R.S.A. test costs no more than the H.I.V. test and is |
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| less invasive, a simple nasal or skin swab; and
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| WHEREAS, Staph bacteria are the most prevalent |
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| infection-causing germs in most hospitals, and increasingly |
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| these infections cannot be cured with ordinary antibiotics; |
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| sixty percent of staph infections are now drug resistant (that |
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HJ0005 |
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LRB095 03995 DRJ 24028 r |
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| is, M.R.S.A.), up from 2 percent in 1974; and
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| WHEREAS, Some people carry M.R.S.A. germs in their noses or |
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| on their skin without realizing it; the bacteria do not cause |
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| infection unless they get inside the body -- usually via a |
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| catheter, a ventilator, or an incision or other open wound; |
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| once admitted to a hospital, these patients shed the germs on |
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| bedrails, wheelchairs, stethoscopes, and other surfaces, where |
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| M.R.S.A. can live for many hours; and
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| WHEREAS, Doctors and other caregivers who lean over an |
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| M.R.S.A.-positive patient often pick up the germ on their |
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| hands, gloves, or lab coats and carry it along to their next |
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| patient; and |
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| WHEREAS, The blood-pressure cuffs that nurses wrap around |
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| patients' bare arms frequently carry live bacteria, including |
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| M.R.S.A.; in a recent study at a French teaching hospital, 77 |
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| percent of blood-pressure cuffs wheeled from room to room were |
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| contaminated; another study linked contaminated blood-pressure |
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| cuffs to several infected infants in the nursery at the |
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| University of Iowa hospital; and |
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| WHEREAS, Among developed nations, the United States has one |
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| of the worst records of curbing drug-resistant infections, |
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| according to the Sentry Antimicrobial Surveillance Program, an |
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HJ0005 |
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LRB095 03995 DRJ 24028 r |
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| international effort to monitor drug-resistant germs; in this |
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| country, M.R.S.A. hospital infections increased 32-fold from |
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| 1976 to 2003, according to the C.D.C.; and |
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| WHEREAS, In the 1980s, Denmark, Finland, and the |
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| Netherlands faced similarly soaring rates of M.R.S.A., but |
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| nearly eradicated it by screening patients and requiring health |
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| care workers treating patients with M.R.S.A. to wear gowns and |
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| gloves and use dedicated equipment to prevent the spread; the |
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| Dutch called their strategy "search and destroy"; and |
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| WHEREAS,
A growing number of hospitals in the United States |
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| have proved that such precautions work here, too; recently, a |
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| pilot program using screening at Presbyterian University |
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| Hospital, in Pittsburgh, reduced M.R.S.A. infections by 90 |
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| percent; at a Yale-affiliated hospital in New Haven, screening |
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| reduced M.R.S.A. infections in intensive care by two-thirds; |
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| and |
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| WHEREAS, A recently completed nine-year study at the |
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| Brigham and Women's Hospital, in Boston, found that screening |
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| led to a 75 percent drop in M.R.S.A. bloodstream infections |
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| among intensive-care patients and a 67 percent decline |
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| throughout the hospital; earlier efforts to stop these |
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| infections by installing many more dispensers of hand cleanser |
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| and conducting a yearlong educational campaign on hand hygiene |
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HJ0005 |
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LRB095 03995 DRJ 24028 r |
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| had no effect; and |
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| WHEREAS, Some public health advocates recommend screening |
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| only "high-risk" patients -- those who recently have been |
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| hospitalized, live in nursing homes, or have kidney disease; |
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| partial screening is somewhat effective, but universal |
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| screening prevents the most infections; and |
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| WHEREAS, Hospitals cannot afford not to screen for |
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| M.R.S.A.; infections wipe out hospital profits; when a patient |
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| develops an infection and has to spend many additional weeks |
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| hospitalized, Medicare does not pay for most of that additional |
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| care; and |
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| WHEREAS,
Treating hospital infections costs an estimated |
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| $30.5 billion a year in the United States; prevention, on the |
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| other hand, is inexpensive and requires no capital outlays; a |
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| pilot program at the University of Pittsburgh found that |
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| screening tests, gowns, and other precautions cost only $35,000 |
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| a year, and saved more than $800,000 a year in infection costs; |
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| a review of similar cost analyses, published in The Lancet in |
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| September, concluded that M.R.S.A. screening increases |
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| hospital profits -- as it saves lives; and |
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| WHEREAS, For a decade, in spite of this evidence, the |
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| C.D.C. has rebuffed calls for screening, most recently from a |
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HJ0005 |
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LRB095 03995 DRJ 24028 r |
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| committee of the Society for Healthcare Epidemiologists of |
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| America; C.D.C. officials claim that more research is needed to |
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| prove the benefits of screening; more research cannot hurt, but |
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| we know enough already to move ahead; and |
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| WHEREAS,
Some hospitals are leading the way, including |
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| Evanston Northwestern, in Illinois; the Veterans Affairs |
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| medical centers; New England Baptist Hospital, in Boston; and |
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| Johns Hopkins Hospital, in Baltimore; and |
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| WHEREAS, The C.D.C.'s lax guidelines give many other |
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| hospitals an excuse to do too little; every year of delay costs |
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| thousands of lives and billions of dollars; therefore, be it
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| RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
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| NINETY-FIFTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE |
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| SENATE CONCURRING HEREIN, that we urge the Centers for Disease |
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| Control and Prevention to adopt guidelines for universal |
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| testing of hospital patients for methicillin-resistant |
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| Staphylococcus aureus (M.R.S.A.) without further delay; and be |
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| it further
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| RESOLVED, That a copy of this resolution be delivered to |
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| the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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