Web Searches Indicate Norovirus Infections in Communities, Researchers Say
August 5th 2010Observing what Internet users type into Web search engines could be a unique way to conduct infectious disease surveillance, according to researchers at the Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control in Solna, Sweden.
Legislation Needed to Modernize Public Health Response to Chronic Viral Hepatitis, Group Says
August 5th 2010The National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable (NVHR) said today that legislation introduced by Sen. John Kerry, "The Viral Hepatitis and Liver Cancer Control and Prevention Act," would transform the country's approach to identifying and treating chronic viral hepatitis B and C.
Reminders, Stop Orders Can Help Reduce CAUTI Rates
August 5th 2010Prolonged catheterization is the primary risk factor for catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI). Reminder systems are interventions used to prompt the removal of unnecessary urinary catheters. Prolonged catheterization is the primary risk factor for catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI). Reminder systems are interventions used to prompt the removal of unnecessary urinary catheters.
Infectious Disease Specialists Surveyed on C. difficile Infection Treatment
August 5th 2010Decision Resources reports that in first- and second-line treatment of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI), nearly 70 percent of surveyed infectious disease specialists and internists will use Optimer's fidaxomicin and nearly half will use Medarex/Merck's CDA1 and CDB1, one year after the launch of these agents.
Researchers Unlocking the Secrets of Cross-Species Rabies Transmission
August 5th 2010Like most infectious diseases, rabies can attack several species. However, which species are going to be infected and why turns out to be a difficult problem that represents a major gap in our knowledge of how diseases emerge.
Researcher Discovers New Way to Boost Vaccines
August 5th 2010As the medical community searches for better vaccines and ways to deliver them, a University of Rochester scientist believes he has discovered a new approach to boosting the bodys response to vaccinations. Richard P. Phipps, PhD, found that the same molecules used in drugs that treat diabetes also stimulate B cells in the immune system, pushing them to make antibodies for protection against invading microorganisms.
Image of New Antibiotic in Action Opens Up New Opportunities to Combat Antibacterial Resistance
August 5th 2010Detailed pictures published today reveal how a new type of experimental antibiotic can kill bacteria that are already resistant to existing treatments. The findings could ultimately help scientists to develop new antibiotics to tackle the bacteria responsible for many hospital and community-acquired infections.
ICU Medical Receives FDA Clearance for its Neutral-Pressure Needleless Connector
August 4th 2010ICU Medical, Inc., a manufacturer of disposable medical connection systems for use in vascular therapy applications, today confirmed that it has received FDA 510-k clearance for the Neutron Neutral-Pressure Needleless Connector.
Infection Preventionists, Manufacturers Cope With Needleless Connectors Issue
August 4th 2010Now that the infection prevention and control community has had some time to learn about the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)s concerns regarding positive-displacement needleless connectors and the possible link to bloodstream infections (BSIs) and patient mortality, the question seems to be, now what?
PPE Market Benefits From Technological Advances, Increasing Demand
August 3rd 2010A recent report from Textiles Intelligence in the United Kingdom indicates that smart textiles and nanotechnology will enhance the benefits of personal protective equipment (PPE) used to protect workers from occupational exposures, hazardous materials, and pathogens that trigger infectious diseases.
Pneumococcal Bacteria Trigger Increase in Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome
August 3rd 2010Introduction of the PCV-7 vaccine to prevent invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) has led to a shift in the types of bacteria causing hemolytic uremic syndrome, an important cause of acute kidney failure in children, reports a study in the August issue of the Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal.
Nurse Loses Limbs and Fingers to Sepsis, Blames Her Hospital
August 3rd 2010The Florida Times-Union is reporting today on the case of Jean Law, a nurse on staff at Baptist Medical Center-South in Jacksonville, Fla. who contracted a bacterial infection and had to have both legs and eight fingers amputated because staff at the facility allegedly failed to diagnose her septic condition quickly enough.
Doctors Not Strongly Encouraging HPV Vaccine for Girls of Certain Ages
August 2nd 2010The vast majority of pediatricians and family physicians nationally are offering the human papillomavirus (also called HPV) vaccine, though fewer physicians are strongly encouraging it for 11- to 12-year-old girls as recommended by national guidelines.
FDA Raises Concerns About Positive-Displacement Needleless Connectors
August 2nd 2010In a letter to infection preventionists, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), is informing them about positive displacement needleless connectors and the possible link to several patient deaths associated with bloodstream infections (BSIs).