“Pressing” the Issue of C. diff Awareness

Posted in Patient Safety, Press Coverage by on May 21st, 2013

Over the past couple of weeks, The Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation (PLMF) has raised significant awareness of clostridium difficile (C. diff) Newspaperinfections through a host of media outlets. As we gear up for our 4th Annual FIGHT C. DIFF GALA on October 18,  I wanted to take moment to recap all the exciting coverage our work has generating for this public health crisis.

First, on April 30, an excellent Associated Press report on the growth of sanitation products designed to kill “superbugs” included a reference to PLMF, and two quotes from yours truly. I was most pleased that the piece ends with the me noting that is healthcare institutions aren’t clean, they can create more health problems than they’re solving. You can check out the full article here, “Hospitals See Surge of Superbug-Fighting Products.”  I was also pleased to see our friend from the Centers for Disease Control, Dr. Cliff McDonald quoted.

The following week, our latest editorial “The revulsion about feces: Get over it” was published on the influential KevinMD.com blog. Originally titled “Talking Shit (Why We Should)”, the piece resulted from my increasing frustration with the pervasive cultural shame that (most) Americans have when it comes to their bowel movements and products. I’ve never been shy when it comes to bodily functions and Mom raised us to be able to talk about our bodies pretty much shame free. Much like gay men had to become comfortable with the discussing the intricacies of sex to combat AIDS, to really fight C. diff infections we’re going to have to get comfortable talking about our shit.

Finally, right before Mother’s Day, Dr. Denice Hilty – a member of our National Advisory Council – had an op-ed published on Women’s E-news. The article, “On Mother’s Day Let’s Talk More About Her Health”, not only communicated our desire to refocus Mother’s Day on the key role women play in their families and the public’s health, but also raised awareness of C. diff among an audience that we haven’t previously engaged.

Much more important than this coverage being a feather in PLMF’s cap, is the urgent need to raise much more public awareness of C. diff and build a larger movement to begin to roll back the death toll.

Our gratitude to these outlets for covering this epidemic and helping us to amplify our voices.

Please share one or all of these pieces with your family and friends, to help us spread the message.

C. diff Story: Teresa Mustain

Posted in Antibiotic Overuse, C. diff Stories, Patient Safety by on March 25th, 2013

Two weeks ago I got an email from a woman named Starr, who wanted to share the story of her mother’s death from Clostridium Teresa and Staffdifficile (C. diff) a few weeks ago. Perhaps because Starr’s mother, Teresa Mustain, age 57 when she died, was only slightly older than our mother, who died at 56, I was particularly touched and saddened when I read her story.

But Teresa’s story also speaks to a range of problems in our healthcare system, some related to C. diff and some not. She battled C. diff and a range of chronic conditions from being overweight to being diabetic for more than 18 months. Teresa was treated by Metronidazole for several months before being put on Vancomycin. She was subjected to three surgical procedures in the last weeks of her life. Her children are still unclear as to the exact causes of their mother’s physical decline in the last year and a half of her life.

Teresa’s story also touches on how ill-equipped and unprepared a subset of Americans are when it comes to monitoring and engaging in their own healthcare, particularly when it comes to preventing, managing and reversing chronic conditions, many of which leave us more susceptible to C. diff and a host of other opportunistic infections.

C. diff Story: Teresa Mustain

Please read and share Teresa’s story with your network. There’s much we can each learn from it and in taking those lessons prevent her death from being in vain.

Christian

Journalists, Patient Advocates and Whistle blowers… Oh my!

Posted in Antibiotic Overuse, Patient Safety by on February 23rd, 2013

Chris and I spent the past two days in Washington, DC at the first-ever Selling Sickness: People Before Profits conference organized by patient safety activist Kim Witzcak and anti-medicalization academic Leonore Tiefer. In

Christian with KIm Witzcak

Christian with “Selling Sickness” co-organizer Kim Witzcak

short, the conference was amazing and a bit overwhelming. The amazing part was seeing the huge number of activists, academics, physicians, journalists, and healthcare workers come together to take on the extreme dysfunction in the United States healthcare system. The overwhelming part was seeing the extent to which our healthcare system is broken and rather than healing us is too often causing more harm than good.

We are taught by our culture and the media to believe that the US healthcare system is the best in the world, the doctors are as infallible as the Catholic Pope, and that if we submit ourselves to its ministrations, we will be given a pill, a procedure or a device that will “fix” us. Sadly, for a host of reasons, our healthcare system is failing far too many Americans – subjecting us to an epidemic of over-treatment, bad science and costing the US more in dollars than any other post-industrial country while delivering, in many cases, worse outcomes.

Because we are so reliant on the healthcare system, most of us do not want to face how deeply flawed it is, particularly when we or a loved one is ill and vulnerable. Moreover, nearly everyone of us knows people who work in healthcare. We have uncles who are MRI techs, sisters who are nurses, brothers-in-law who are doctors, friends who are pharmaceutical salesmen. The vast majority of them are good, moral people who go to work every day wanting to help the sick and suffering but the corruption in our system hobbles our best intentions.

Since I can’t possibly do justice to the entire conference in this blog post, I want to share a few highlights of the people we met and stories we heard. The conference organizers will be making session materials available next month and we will post a link to them then.

  • Dr. John Abramson of Harvard moderated an eye-opening roundtable of researchers and scientists critiquing the way new drugs are approved by the Food and Drug Administration. About 85% of all drug clinical trials are now funded by the companies that developed the drug. This is an obvious conflict of interest made worse by the fact that 45% of the funding for the FDA comes from the fees companies pay to have their drugs, devices and procedures approved. In real terms, this leads to drugs and devices that are ineffective and/or harmful being marketed to doctors and hospitals who are often ignorant to the truth behind the false advertising claims made by the manufacturers. Check out Dr. Abramson’s book, “Overdosed America”, for the full scoop on the dangers in our current approval process.
  • The “From Grief to Action” panel hit home for me. It featured Helen Haskell of Mothers Against Medical Error, who lost her 15-year-old son Lewis in 2000; Dan Walters, whose wife suffered terrible injuries to her heart when an intern was allowed to perform a new surgery unbeknownst to them; Sara Bostock, whose daughter committed suicide while on an SSRI; and John Fratti, a former pharmaceutical sales rep who suffered neurological damage from using the antibiotic Levaquin. Author Rosemary Gibson moderated the panel. While each of their stories is unbelievably painful to hear, they have all made amazing contributions to advancing patient safety in their own way. Helen has passed Lewis Blackman Hospital Safety Act in 2005 in her home state of South Carolina, among her many accomplishments. Sara was pivotal in creating a website, SSRIStories.com that compiles the harm caused by antidepressants. Dan published an excellent book, “Collateral Damage”, that details how his wife was harmed. John created a blog, Levaquin Hurts, and even purchased stock in Johnson & Johnson so he could tell his story at the company’s shareholder meetings. The most touching moment for me came when Rosemary asked the panel how they manage to keep doing this work after so many years. Helen simply replied that she couldn’t stop if she wanted to; losing her son was so painful that advocacy was a necessary reaction (and distraction) to her own grief and suffering.
  • During the “Hijacking Patient Empowerment” session,  Rosemary Gibson gave a stirring presentation that highlighted the similarities between the mortgage crisis that blew up the world economy in 2008 and the current crisis in healthcare in terms of harm caused, lack of transparency and inflated costs, that should worry every American.
  • Our good friends, Patty Skolnik and Pat Mastors, held a great session on building allies among doctors, administrators, politicians, executives in order to effect change within the system in addition to exerting pressure from outside the system.

There were many other amazing panels, sessions and people that we met during the conference. I’m proud that The Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation was a co-sponsor of Selling Sickness and look forward to keeping all our supporters informed about the great things that result from it.

Peggy’s Story Helps Nurse with C. diff Get Diagnosed

Posted in C. diff Stories, Peggy by on January 14th, 2013

One of our overarching goals in starting the Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation was to raise awareness of Clostridium difficile (C. diff) so other families wouldn’t suffer the loss of a loved one. While most Americans have never

MaryAnn Dillon

MaryAnn Dillon

heard of C. diff, doctors and nurses general know about it, even if they aren’t up to speed on the latest developments. So we were surprised and pleased to learn that Peggy’s story helped, MaryAnn Dillon, a nurse and colleague of Peggy’s sister, Helen, to get properly diagnosed and treated.

Please read and share MaryAnn’s story to help us raise awareness.

C. diff Story: MaryAnn Dillon

C. diff Detection is Going to the Dogs

Posted in Patient Safety, Peggy by on December 15th, 2012

The amount of time and money spent detecting C. diff and other healthcare associated infections is an obstacle to prompt treatment. This smart (and very cute) video shows that dogs could very well be the answer to detection. In the Netherlands, a team has trained a beagle named Cliff to sniff out C. diff among patients even hours after their last bowel movement.

Peggy was a dog lover through and through. I imagine seeing this little guy work brings her joy.

What I Learned at the Centers for Disease Control

Posted in Antibiotic Overuse, Patient Safety by on September 30th, 2012

Last Tuesday, I had the great privilege of being part of an all-day meeting on eliminating hospital acquired infections (HAIs), including clostridium difficile (C. diff) at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. The meeting was Center for Disease Control Signarranged by the CDC in partnership with Consumers Union’s Safe Patient Project, of which the Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation is a member. It brought together several patient safety activists and more than 20 CDC experts including several senior staff members, including Dr. Denise Cardo, head of Health Quality Promotion, and Dr. Cliff McDonald, Chief of the Prevention and Response Branch of Health Quality Promotion and the CDC’s leading expert on C. diff.

I’m still processing all the information we learned and all the ways that the foundation can work with the CDC. But I left Atlanta full of incredible hope and extremely proud of all the hard work we’ve done to get us to this point. Sitting next to Dr. McDonald and listening to an amazing coterie of experts, each of whom had incredible passion for eliminating HAIs, was both humbling and inspiring.

Perhaps the most energizing aspect of the meeting was seeing how upset the CDC staff were by the growth in death and harm caused by HAIs. Many doctors who work for the CDC  came to it before the modern patient safety movement, most often spurred on by the failure of the institutions where they worked to reduce avoidable harm. Some were frustrated by the fact that HAIs are a largely preventable problem and the primary reasons we haven’t eliminated them is not lack of knowledge but of  resources, particularly financial resources, and the political will to insist that the healthcare industry do better. One staff member became visibly angry when discussing the rampant nature of HAIs in nursing homes. These are not bureaucratic “drones” that government employees are often portrayed as in the media. Nearly every single person I interacted with was committed to saving lives.

Early on in the meeting, Dr. Cardo said, “We are all patients.” The truth of that statement reverberated throughout the auditorium. No matter our current health status, at some point every single American is a patient. Shortly after the meeting began, the head of the CDC Dr. Thomas Frieden came to speak to the group. Though Dr. Frieden was only supposed to spend ten minutes with us, he actually remained for over a half-hour engaging in conversation and answer questions. Dr. Frieden was unequivocal in saying “healthcare associated infections are unacceptable.” Frieden was also clear that we need to develop systems within healthcare that compensation for human error. He said, “it’s not about getting people to be perfect. It’s about getting systems and fail-safes in place that prevent harm.” Finally, Dr. Frieden emphasized the importance of patient’s stories, saying “we need to see the lives and faces behind the numbers” if we’re going to make progress.

As the day progressed, there were many excellent conversations and brainstorming sessions. Highlights of the rest of the day include:

  • Learning the the CDC has three main goals around HAIs: Improved adherence to their guidelines by healthcare providers; increased surveillance and tracking of HAIs, and increasing the capacity of state health departments since healthcare is “primarily a state affair.”
  • Hearing that one of the CDC’s key challenges is that public health has “no natural feedback loop”, so they have to engage patient groups to assess how they’re doing.
  • Learning about the stark public health challenges caused by the rise of ambulatory surgery centers, a full 80% of which are not owned by a hospital (even when they are physically located on a healthcare campus) and only 25% of which are accredited by the Joint Commission (which accredits hospitals). These facilities are often staffed by per diem nurses, radiologists, and anesthesiologists, making it very difficult to ensure consistent and high-quality care.

Finally, a significant part of the meeting was set aside for a discussion of C. diff. The CDC staff seemed particularly perturbed by the lack of progress made in stemming the growing tide of death and harm it causes. There was acknowledgment that prior to 2000, C. diff was largely seen as a “nuisance” infection with a low death rate. But since the CDC began surveillance, they have noted (as many public health experts have) the increasing rates of death and harm caused by C. diff. One CDC expert said that C. diff is the “poster-child” for the “portability of HAIs” (or the ability for infections to be transferred from one patient/healthcare worker/facility to another and even into the community). Since the meeting, PLMF has been in touch with several CDC staff member and we look forward to working with them to increase our mutual impact in minimizing death and disability arising from C. diff.

C. diff Story: Ricky Spiese

Posted in Antibiotic Overuse, C. diff Stories, Patient Safety by on August 27th, 2012

Ricky is a 25-year-old man living in Los Angeles, California. I became acquainted with him through a Facebook C. diff Support Group.

Ricky Spiese

Ricky Spiese

Ricky’s story is unique and interesting for a number of reasons. First, Ricky’s convinced that he was colonized by C. diff while visiting his late grandmother in a nursing home.  He notes that, while she had been diagnosed with C. diff, at no point did the nursing home staff warn him or his other family members to take sanitary or hygiene precautions.

Second, Ricky’s C. diff infection was set off, not by the oral antibiotics typically associated with CDIs, but by using Cipro eye drops.

Third, Ricky’s mother figured out that he was suffering from C. diff by reviewing his grandmother’s medical records and realizing the connection between her mother’s illness and her son’s.

Finally, Ricky spend months and thousands of dollars trying to cure himself of C. diff. Eventually, he and his gastroenterologist decided he should have a fecal transplant.  Inexplicably, the hospital where the GI doctor was affiliated refused to approve the procedure, so Ricky ultimately ended up doing an enema-based fecal transplant at home!

Please read and share Ricky’s story to help us raise awareness.

Ricky Spiese’s C. diff Story

Help us make the difference to end C. diff.

Posted in C. diff Stories, E-Newsletter, Patient Safety, Peggy, Public Service Annoucement by on August 23rd, 2012

Dear Friends,

 

There’s a simple phrase in healthcare. You may have seen it on a prescription pad, or a plastic vial.

 

It’s PRN, and it stands for the Latin pro re nata, or “as needed.” It’s a directive that applies to taking medication. And it holds true for the work of our foundation.

 

In just 2 years, the Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation has rallied a national coalition to confront a disease that afflicts people in healthcare settings and claims the lives of more than 25,000 Americans each year. C. diff. has been cutting a steadily widening and lethal swath through the country for the last 40 years. But it doesn’t have to.

 

How do we prevent C. diff.? And how do we identify it quickly in patients so it doesn’t kill? These are the questions the foundation has become a force in answering. Consumers and caregivers are using our materials every day to improve healthcare in the U.S.

 

Our ability to shape health strategies and outcomes derives in large part from the support of people who care. We ask you to join the ranks of our supporters today with a tax-deductible contribution.

 

Please click here to make an online donation.

 

We are making a difference because we make information practical.

 

Over the past 6 months, our “C. diff Stories” have cut through the mythology of hospital acquired infections to lay out the facts.

 

Our blog shares important guidance: how to limit diff bacteria in supermarket meat, how clindamycin may hold risks in treating C. diff infections, increasing mortality in mice by 40 percent; and how the case of Peggy Lillis, the foundation’s namesake, holds valuable lessons about early identification of symptoms so that improving treatment strategies have a chance to limit the mortality of C. diff.

 

Spotting and stopping this disease starts with you. Your support allows us gather and share the necessary facts and do what’s needed to inform caregivers and consumers. Please contribute what you can today so we continue our progress.

 

Thank you for standing with us in the fight against C. diff. and creating a healthier nation.

 

3rd Annual Fight C.Diff Gala

 

JOIN US!

CLICK HERE

ABOUT PEGGY LILLIS

Sincerely,

Christian John Lillis & Liam LillisCo-Founders, The Peggy Lillis memorial Foundation

 

Walking to Raise Awareness at Eagle Lake

Posted in Community, Peggy by on August 18th, 2012

On Sunday, August 12th, we joined the resident of Eagle Lake Recreation Community in Gouldsboro, Pennsylvania for one of it’s summer walk-a-thons.

Christian at Eagle Lake Walk-A-Thon with Carmela and Maryann

Carmela McCann, one of our mother’s colleagues at PS 198 and an Eagle Lake resident, had arranged for the Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation to be the recipient of the proceeds from this event.

Chris and I spent Saturday night at a nearby hotel and took April with us to Eagle Lake at 9:00 am on Sunday morning. It was a beautiful summer day – warm, sunny and not too humid. When we arrived, people were beginning to register for the walk. All told, we probably had about 60 people join the event to walk, jog and run. The organizers invited me to speak briefly about C. diff, why we started the foundation and what we’re doing to raise awareness and combat the infection.

We  met a few people who were familiar with C. diff, including a family that had lost their father to the disease a few months ago. But, as has been our experience in most situations, most people had never heard of it.

The walk itself was lovely – about 2 and a half miles around the Lake for which the community is named. Chris and I walked with April and took turns walking alongside different participants telling them more about the foundation’s work. All  in all, it was a great event.

We are so grateful to the residents of Eagle Lake for joining us to learn about C. diff and the work of the Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation. We are also immensely grateful to our dear friend Carmela for arranging this great opportunity to raise money and, more importantly awareness of this potentially deadly infection.

 

C. diff Story: Tiara Davis

Posted in C. diff Stories, Patient Safety by on July 27th, 2012

Tiara Davis is 22-year-old woman living in Jacksonville, Florida. She has been battling C. diff since April 29th. Despite not having been hospitalized, or having any of the risk factors typically associated with C. diff infections, Tiara has lost more than 40 pounds in the past 4 months as she struggled to get diagnosed and received effective treatment.

Tiara’s story is a perfect example of the changing face of C. diff as it continues to morph from a healthcare associated infection primarily found in elderly Americans with compromised immune systems to a disease that can seemingly afflict anyone at anytime. We are grateful to Tiara for sharing her story with us and helping us to dispel that myths around C. diff.

Please helps the foundation and Tiara to raise C. diff awareness by sharing her story with your friends and family by email or on social media. You can click on the icons below to share Tiara’s story.

Tiara’s C. diff Story: Fighting C. diff in Jacksonville

Guest Blog: “Patient safety must be a reflex” by Jean Rexford

Posted in Guest Blogs, Patient Safety by on July 23rd, 2012

Connecticut Center for Patient Safety

In this blog post, I wanted to share the excerpted testimony of Jean Rexford, executive director of the nonprofit advocacy group Connecticut Center for Patient Safety, to the U.S. Senate Committee on Aging and member Sen. Richard Blumenthal. Jean is a friend and amazing activist both in her state and nationwide. While her testimony is specific to Connecticut, it contains lessons for the patient safety movement writ large. – Christian

 

“Preventable adverse events contributed to the deaths of as many as 950 Medicare beneficiaries last year in Connecticut alone. These 950 deaths occurred in Connecticut hospitals – this statistic does not include preventable deaths in our nursing homes or private homes, nor does it include the non-Medicare population. Another 22,000 patients acquired infections while they were treated in health care facilities and almost all of these were preventable.

Three separate recent reports in 2010 and 2011 found that at least one in four patients are harmed while hospitalized, and the financial costs are staggering. Nationally, hospital-acquired infections cost our economy as much as $45 billion, while patient falls in hospitals and nursing homes in 2005 alone added another $34 billion in costs.

Behind each statistic there is a name, a family, a story of sorrow; for some it’s medical bankruptcy, for others, it is unemployment. But for all patients harmed by the health care system, there is physical and emotional pain, a profound broken trust, and disbelief that while being treated they had been harmed by preventable medical errors.

The Connecticut Center for Patient Safety was formed in 2005 to be the voice of consumer patients. We are determined not to be forgotten collateral damage in a terribly broken health care system. Today, we are joined by other advocacy groups in a national patient safety movement. Loosely organized through Consumers Union Safe Patient Project, we work together to promote patient safety, improve quality and protect patient rights.

In Connecticut we are working with another patient focused advocacy group – Code Jump Start. We are trying to shine a spotlight on the need to put the patient first and foremost in this vast medical industrial complex and the regulatory agencies that have in the past not always had patients’ interests in mind.

“We began our work with hospital infections. When I learned in 2005 that there were just two infections reported across 31 hospitals in Connecticut, I knew that it was a good issue to tackle. We were told by hospitals executives with whom we spoke that most infections were ‘expected,’ which revealed to me a fundamental gap between consumer and medical facility perspectives. I can assure you that no health care consumer ‘expects’ to visit a licensed medical facility and acquire a deadly infection as a result of receiving care. It was not difficult to amass stories of patients and families and what had happened to them when they had acquired an infection. Keith lost his job. Mary’s infected hip replacement put her in a wheelchair for the rest of her life.

We brought these stories to our legislature – and legislators added their own stories. Twenty-six states now have legislation requiring public reporting of hospital-acquired infections, and the federal government paid attention. There is an impressive nationwide effort to begin to address infections and needless suffering and costs. But think of the individuals who have died and their families loss because medical facilities were slow to react without legislative intervention.

We have learned over the years that legislation has limitations … Health care consumers will never get all that we want or all that we deserve. There is absolutely no road map for the consumer patient safety movement and only meager funding for advocates. When funding is awarded for patient safety improvements in the clinical setting, there is seldom a requirement for consumer representation on medical facility commissions, panels, and workgroups studying patient safety innovation and quality improvement. Most funded endeavors exclude patient voices altogether.

While we have worked hard to collaborate with hospitals to get a seat at the table to solve the patient safety epidemic, we concurrently faced obstruction by the industry’s powerful and well-funded lobbyists serving profit motives first. We realized we had to think more creatively and decided that nurses make an enormous difference in the quality of care and keeping patents safe. We started an outreach program to nursing schools. Collaborating directly with providers, instead of institutions, seemed a far more positive way to work. Our nursing education program has been successful and continues to grow.

Some doors have now opened and we regularly participate in state and national efforts; however, there is much work to be done to bring awareness to an issue that for too long has been accepted by the medical community, overlooked by regulators, unknown to the vast majority of the general public and unsuspecting patients, and out of the realm of consumer protection. Without transparency and accountability, patients will continue to be harmed by medical facilities that tolerate errors at a rate unheard of in other safety sensitive industries.

We are eager to work with medical facilities and the health care system, and have just recently begun collaborating with innovators that welcome our participation … Islands of excellence … have begun to take shape and make progress, but why aren’t these islands the norm, instead of the exception?

Several years ago, the federal government launched the Partnership for Patients. This was an important initiative for health care providers but it took two years before patients and patient advocates were even invited to Washington to participate. But then we were told not to come. There was no money – no money for the patients.

We were sadly an afterthought. Patients and patient safety must be a reflex. Only when we become an equal partner will we begin to see safe patient-centered care.”

 

http://westfaironline.com/25340/patient-safety-must-be-a-reflex/#comments

3 Rock Stars in the Fight Against C. diff

Posted in Antibiotic Overuse by on July 5th, 2012

Bristol Hospital C. diff  Rates

While the statistics around rising Clostridium difficile (C. diff) infections throughout the United States are grim, in this post I want to highlight three organizations that are making great strides in reducing infection rates.

More than anything these three organizations prove that the status quo is not only unacceptable; it’s also unnecessary. With the proper investments in environmental services, staff training, patient education and tracking, we can make significant and tangible progress in lowering the rates of C. diff colonization, infections and deaths.

Here are the 3 Rock Stars:

1) The University Hospitals Bristol decreased the number of C. diff cases by 90% over the past 5 years, from 364 in the period from April 2007 – March 2008 to 54 in April 2011 – March 2012. Key to UHB’s success is an enormous change in how they think about C. diff and other infections.  According to Christine Perry, trust director of infection and disease control, “Up until five or six years ago, people thought that because you were elderly or had a chest infection and were on antibiotics, you would get an infection such as C. diff. Now people see it very differently, that infections are preventable.” The importance of believing that progress can be made in the fight against C. diff cannot be overstated.

2) The Illinois Department of Public Health kicked off a new statewide education campaign in June to educate health care workers and hospital staff about C. diff prevention. The Illinois Campaign to Eliminate C. diff (ICE C. diff) will include educational webinars and regional meetings through a partnership with IFMC-IL, the state healthcare quality improvement organization. As of March 6, 137 facilities statewide have signed up for the program.

3) In Ohio, Anderson Hospital in Cincinnati is reporting great results in reducing hospital acquired infections, including C. diff, through implementing a new technology that uses ultraviolet light to eliminate harmful bacteria. The technology, called IRiS (Intelligent Room Sterilization),  has been used by the environmental cleaning team at Anderson (who refer to it as the “Germinator”) since last summer and has resulted in a 32 drop in the rate of C. diff infections in the past year. Again, statements from the executives at Anderson reflect a shift in mindset that is crucial to our long-term ability to save lives and money. “We already do a tremendous job of reducing the risk of infection to our patients, but we want to do everything we can to provide an even safer environment,” said Gayle Heintzelman, site administrator at Clermont Hospital, the sister organization to Anderson. IRiS is distributed by Medline Industries.

Certainly, there is much more work that needs to be done by healthcare executives, physicians, hospital workers and patient advocates to reverse the current trends. But it’s vital that we educate both those who work in healthcare and those receiving those services that change is possible and laud those organizations that are showing the way.

Help us to spread the word that C. diff is a solvable problem by sharing this post with your network.

 

 

5 Ways You Can Prevent C. diff

Posted in Antibiotic Overuse, Patient Safety by on July 1st, 2012

Success_CheckmarkThough the news about Clostridium difficile (C. diff0 infections has been grim of late, there are several things that you can do to protect yourself and your loved ones. A recent report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted that, contrary to the common wisdom, most people acquire C. diff, not in the hospital but in medical settings such as nursing homes, doctors’ offices, and outpatient centers.

However, as WebMD stated shortly after the report came out, here are 5 ways you can be proactive in protecting yourself:

1) Use antibiotics appropriately and only when necessary. Per WebMD, “Antibiotics are lifesaving medicines, but do much more harm than good when you don’t need them. Don’t beg your doctor for an antibiotic prescription if he or she doesn’t think you need one.”

2) Tell your doctor if you have been on antibiotics and get diarrhea within a few months.

3) Wash your hands — carefully — after using the bathroom.

4) If you have diarrhea, try to use a separate bathroom from the rest of the family. Be sure a bathroom is cleaned well if someone with diarrhea has used it.

5) If you are a caretaker for a person with C. diff infection, wear gloves during active treatment. Then clean your hands thoroughly. If the patient is using the bathroom, clean it well with a bleach solution.

Being smart and careful as a patient and caretaker can make all the difference!

Read the full report from the CDC: Making Health Care Safer – Stopping C. difficile Infections

2 Girls. One Conference.

Posted in Antibiotic Overuse, C. diff Stories, Patient Safety by on June 30th, 2012

Conference Attendees

I just returned from the Mid-Atlantic Researchers Conference (MARC) at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. The conference is an annual gathering of people from my “day job”, fundraising research. I have attended and presented workshops at MARC many times over the years and always enjoyed it.

This year was a bit different. Last month, an I published an article in Connections, the journal of the Association of Professional Researchers for Advancement (APRA), which is the professional association that organizes MARC. The article, which I will be sharing excerpts from on here in the near future, was about how my career in fundraising research helped us to start the Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation. Since the article was published pretty recently, I thought I might get some congratulatory comments from conference attendees that head read the piece, but that would be the end of it.

I wasn’t prepared for two of the women at the conference to come up to me and “out” themselves as C. diff survivors.

The first woman was involved in the planning of the conference and she approached me as I was getting ready for my presentation (which was completely unrelated to C. diff or the foundation). She told me that she had hesitated to bring it up since she was afraid discussing my mother would upset me right before my presentation. I told her I love talking about my mother, no matter the circumstances. That’s when she told me that following a surgery a few years ago, she came down with C. diff. Though she was sick for a few weeks she did recover. This woman is in her 30s and otherwise healthy. Not the “typical” C. diff patient.

The second woman attended my presentation. While giving the audience a brief overview of my career, I mentioned the foundation. Later, we both ended up in a group that went to dinner together. This woman sat next to me and during dinner she told me that she got C. diff after giving birth to her first child. She told me that she was extremely sick for 5 months and was misdiagnosed at first. Her OBGYN didn’t think it was related to her giving birth and her primary physician thought it was IBS. Ultimately, she lost more than 25 pounds and spent the her first few months as a new mother desperately ill. She thanked me for the foundation’s work and said she will probably send us her full story to help build awareness.

I am struck by the fact that at a conference of 200 people, 2 young women, who were otherwise healthy, both had fought C. diff. It makes me wonder how many others are out there – undiagnosed, misdiagnosed and suffering, possibly dying because of old stereotypes and the dearth of knowledge among the public.

2012 Peggy Lillis Spirit of Community Awards

Posted in Community, Peggy by on June 25th, 2012

Friday morning I had the privilege of presenting the 3rd Annual Peggy Lillis School Spirit Awards to four awesome kids during the PS 198 Kindergarten Graduation.PS 198 2012 Kindergarten Grad

Despite the 100 degree heat in the auditorium, the parents and students were very excited to celebrate and I was delighted to be on hand to hand out the awards to the four recipients. According to their teachers, each of them embodied the commitment to service and community that Mom was known for as a teacher.

While attending the graduation inevitably makes me sad because it’s a reminder that Mom won’t be teaching more students, the hectic energy of being in a room of 100 5-year-olds and a bunch of Kindergarten teachers managing them, also makes me feel closer to her.

Two years and 2 months after losing Mom, seeing the commitment that the PS 198 Principal, Joy-Ann Morgan, and Mom’s colleagues have to keeping her memory alive and honoring her love for her students through this award, continues to inspire me to continue our work to fight C. diff and warms my heart knowing that we have so many wonderful friends keeping their love for Mom alive.

At its heart, The Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation is an educational enterprise. Not only because the public is in desperate need of greater understanding related to C. diff, but also because to her core Mom was an educator.

She taught me and Liam to love each other even when we were fighting. She taught us to prize our friends and family and keep them close to us even when they were screwing up. She taught us to stand up and fight back when we see an injustice.

Those are the great lessons she taught us and that we teach others through the foundation’s work. So take a minute now, and share some information about C. diff with your friends and loved ones.

By clicking on the link below, you can let people know about the C. diff and the foundation through email, by posting a link to Facebook or tweeting about us.

Help Fight C. diff. Spread the Word!

C. diff More Dangerous Outside of Hospital

Posted in Antibiotic Overuse, Patient Safety, Peggy by on June 18th, 2012

Surgical InstrumentsDespite the common wisdom of most doctors and patients that clostridium difficile is primarily a threat to elderly, hospitalized people, recent studies indicate that not only are cases of “community-onset” C. diff growing but they are more likely to result in surgery and other serious complications.

In April, the Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology journal published a study from the Centers for Disease Control, that found people who developed a C. diff Infection outside of the hospital setting were four times more likely to require a colectomy (surgical removal of the colon) than those who developed symptoms while hospitalized. And people 65 or older are at even higher risk.

People in the community, including those living in nursing homes or recently treated in physicians offices, were previously thought to be at low risk for C. diff.  The CDC study showed that up to 75% of all C. diff infections show up in community settings.

The combination of increased infection rates and a larger percentage of people becoming symptomatic outside of a hospital speaks to the growing trend and severity.

While the study doesn’t speculate as to the reasons why community-onset cases more frequently lead to colectomy, from my own experience, I suspect the following reasons:

  • Unlike MRSA and pnuemonia, the public is largely ignorant to both the existence and danger of clostridium difficile infections.
  • Therefore, people who become symptomatic outside of the hospital are likely to assume that their symptoms (diarrhea, fever) are the result of a virus or food poisoning and delay treatment.
  • Many physicians and healthcare providers working outside of hospital settings hold outdated notions of what a “C. diff patient” looks like (i.e. elderly, hospitalized, immuno-suppressed) and, therefore, miss the tell-tale signs.
  • Finally, there is a new, hypervirulent strain of C. diff that has emerged wherein the toxins produced by the bacteria are much stronger and cause great damage to the patient more rapidly than older strains.

To protect yourself and your loved ones, keep in mind that C. diff symptoms can appear long after your last hospitalization, visit to a nursing home, or doctor’s office. Remain vigilant for C. diff symptoms in anyone who has recently been in a hospital or healthcare setting, particularly if they are taking or have recently taken antibiotics.

You can read more here:

Vital Signs: Preventing Clostridium difficile Infections.  (free registration required)

Community onset Clostridium difficile linked to higher risk of surgery

Deaths from Medical Errors Undercounted

Posted in Guest Blogs, Patient Safety by on June 15th, 2012
Helen Haskell

Helen Haskell

Since the CDC released its latest and, at 14,000 the highest, annual estimate of the number of people killed by clostridium difficile infections, numbers have been on my mind a lot. In future posts I will address in more depth why I doubt the accuracy of even this extraordinary number of lives lost. Suffice it to say for the moment that i suspect this number is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of lives lost.

For now, I want to turn your attention to an article from my fellow patient advocate, Helen Haskell. Helen found her way into patient advocacy following the death of 12-year-old son, Lewis, from numerous medical errors. I met Helen through the Consumers Union Safe Patient Project last fall.

In person, she’s a very unassuming woman from South Carolina with a slight accent and quiet (at least by New York standards) speaking voice. But that persona belies her incredible passion and a activist spirit. Since Lewis’ death, Helen has founded Mothers Against Medical Error, lobbied to pass patient safety legislation in South Carolina and succeeded in passing the Lewis Blackman Hospital Safety Act in memory of her son.

Helen’s piece is an important call for more widespread studies of the scale and variety of patient harm and death.

Please read and share it.

How We Err When Counting the Casualties of Medical Care

Martha Deed’s 7 Tips for Patient Advocacy

Posted in Patient Safety by on June 12th, 2012

Since joining the Consumers Union Safe Patient Project, I have had the pleasure of meeting and getting to know a number of amazing patient advocates. By and large, those who enter the world of patient advocacy come from

Martha on her laptop

two groups: people who lost a loved one as the result of a medical error, negligence, hospital-acquired-infection, etc., and advocate on behalf of the person they lost, and people who were themselves harmed but survived and are able to advocate to prevent others from suffering as they did and are.

Martha Deed belongs to the former group. Martha is a psychologist who lost her daughter, Millie, in November 2009 to a series of medical errors that compounded her existing autoimmune syndrome: Behcet’s disease. I first met Martha at a convening of patient safety advocates in Yonkers last October. Since then we have also worked together as part of North East Voices for Error Reduction (NEVER), a regional collective of patient advocates from Northeast states.

I recently read a piece that Martha wrote for Patient Safety Insight, the magazine of American Society of Professionals in Patient Safety, “Connecting the Dots: From Family Advocacy to Patient Safety in the Hospital“. I like the article for a number of reasons. First, Martha shares the uncertainty that many of us feel in doing this work. As anyone who has visited a hospital knows, the American healthcare system is incredibly complex, and many of us who come to work in patient advocacy do not have formal training. Second, Martha shares the fear and confusion anyone might feel in trying to advocate for their family member. Finally, Martha shares her hard-earned wisdom  on how to be an effective advocate for your loved one.

I encourage you to read the piece in its entirety, but at a minimum. please take time to review the following tips from Martha:

Before hospitalization occurs:

1. Family members can make themselves familiar with the hospital they are most likely to use by looking up their local hospitals on their state health department website. States vary regarding information they make public. Helpful information includes the record of citations and corrective actions that have been taken against the hospital by the Department of Health. Even if the entries are not current, the citation record can alert family members to potential hazards in the hospital.

2. Look up results of patient satisfaction surveys for the hospital. Check for infection rates, medical errors, and mortality and failure to rescue rates as reported by such websites as Hospital Compare
(http://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov)

3. Especially if you have a family member with chronic illness, read a good book on patient safety, so that you do not find yourself trying to learn about patient advocacy under fire. The Empowered Patient by Dr. Julia Hallisy (theempoweredpatient.com) is almost encyclopedic in scope and practical detail. While it may not be feasible to do everything that Dr. Hallisy recommends, it is very helpful to become aware of the pitfalls and steps she suggests.

Often, however, the hospitalization comes as a surprise and a shock. Under those conditions, it is difficult to operate at one’s best.

1. Read the hospital’s orientation material carefully. Find out who is in charge of your loved one’s case. Be present for rounds by that physician.

2. Make sure that others are available to visit and comfort the patient if you are engaged in advocacy.

3. Have someone stay with the patient as close to 24/7 as possible, because problems can occur day or night. Do not attempt to do it all by yourself.

4. Get some rest yourself so that you can remain helpful and clear thinking.

5. Keep a log, so you do not lose track of what is happening with your family member’s care. Include notes of any contact with medical staff. Write your notes as soon as feasible after a conversation. This step can go far in preventing misunderstandings as well as mistakes.

6. The hospital will likely wish the patient or family to designate a single contact person. However, the contact person (you, the patient advocate) can benefit if you have someone with whom to discuss patient’s treatment. This back-up person ideally should know the patient well and be someone the patient trusts. The back-up can assist the family advocate with keeping focused, identifying communication or treatment gaps. If this person has had previous advocacy experience at that hospital, it can be a bonus. The back-up can be a relative, friend, clergy, or any other person who is informed about the workings of the local medical community.

7. Always, no matter what, remain polite. This is true even though you should not hesitate to go right up the hospital hierarchy if you sense an emergency. 

Florida Pastor’s Battle with C. diff

Posted in C. diff Stories, Patient Safety by on June 8th, 2012

I came across Pastor Vic on Twitter where he was sharing the story of his recent battle with C. diff. The Pastor was sick for 10 days before he finally reached out to his doctor who urged him to go to the emergency room. Luckily, Pastor Vic did recover and is back working with church.

After reading his story on the pastor’s blog, I reached out to him and asked if we could use it on the foundation website. I’m happy to say that he agreed.

I’m particularly pleased because his is only the second story we have from a man who fought C. diff. Despite the fact that men and women are diagnosed with C. diff on a roughly equal basis, the men who have reached out to the foundation have been more reticent to share. That’s in keeping with the general trend of men being more circumspect about sharing information about their health.

Even if you’re not religious, I think you’ll enjoy Pastor Vic’s perspective on C. diff and how he links the need for better hygiene to old Biblical tales. If you are a Christian, you can also check out his weekly sermon blog: Monday Mornings with Pastor Vic.

As always please tweet, Facebook or otherwise share this the pastor’s story with your friends to help us raise awareness.

Now, on to Pastor Vic’s story:

Pastor Vic

Wall Street Journal Article Shows Progress Is Possible

Posted in Antibiotic Overuse, Patient Safety by on June 6th, 2012

Monday’s Wall Street Journal had an excellent article showcasing how Hunterdon Medical Center in New Jersey has made enormous strides in controlling clostridium difficile and other healthcare associated infections.

It’s definitely worth reading the whole article, but I want to highlight just how successful Hunterdon has been. From 2006 to 2011, the hospital:

  • Cut its rate of C. diff infections by 79%
  • Reduced MRSA by 66%, and
  • Dropped its vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) rate by 23% last year

This is great progress that is undoubtedly saving hundreds of patients from needless suffering and even death.

These gains are not the result of luck but of concerted effort and investment by Hunterdon:

Prompting Hunterdon to overhaul its methods was a growing threat from a strong strain of C. diff in 2004. At highest risk for C. diff are patients, especially older adults, who are on antibiotics for other infections. The drugs destroy good germs that protect against infection for several months, during which time patients can get sick from C. diff picked up from contaminated surfaces or spread from a health-care provider’s hands.

The hospital began isolating patients who had contracted C. diff and asked doctors to restrict the use of the antibiotic Cipro. But it was becoming clear that spores could survive for weeks, even on a doorknob. Alcohol-based hand sanitizers didn’t kill C. diff, and hand-washing wasn’t sufficient.

So the hospital adopted new, stronger soaps containing the antiseptic chlorhexidine for staffers and patients. Cleaning crews began using bleach and a more potent form of hydrogen peroxide. Rooms were scrubbed as never before: In rooms where C. diff patients had been treated, even the curtains were taken down and cleaned.

Ms. Nash coaches cleaning staff on the importance of disinfecting “high-touch” surfaces on which germs can linger. One current focus: the remote control devices whose buttons allow patients to watch TV or call a nurse. Cleaning staff are encouraged to speak up if they feel they are being rushed to clean a room.

The visual checks traditionally done to confirm a room was clean “are no longer sufficient,” says Ms. Roye-Horn.

The Hunterdon team conducts random audits with the swabbing device on about 300 surfaces a month. Some 95% to 100% of checks get a passing grade, up from 75% when the hospital acquired the device in 2009.

Effectively combating healthcare associated infections costs money. In addition to hiring additional staff, including more cleaners, Hunterdon has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars over the past 5 years to upgrade its infection surveillance and control technology. Given than the average extended stay or readmission for an infection like C. diff can cost over $30,000, investing in prevention is increasingly seen as cost-effective.

What Hunterdon proves more than anything, is that change is possible. That smart investment in staff, training and upgraded infrastructure to monitor and prevent healthcare associated infections can stave off needless pain, suffering, and even death. And those of us who have lost someone to an HAI know you can’t put a price on that.

Behind One Hospital’s Fight Against Deadly Infection, Wall Street Journal