Anti-bacterial bathing reduces 'superbugs'


BALTIMORE, Sep 7, 2009 (UPI via COMTEX) -- Bathing hospital patients with a
weak solution of chlorhexidine may help protect them against superbugs, U.S.
researchers say.

Chlorhexidine is the same anti-bacterial agent used by surgeons to "scrub in"
before an operation.

The study, published in Critical Care Medicine, found giving critically ill
hospital patients a daily sponge bath with a 4 percent solution of chlorhexidine
may lower deadly blood stream infections by as much as 73 percent.

Even when they are not fatal, hospital-acquired hospital infections have been
reported to lengthen hospital stays by an average of a full week and add as much
as $40,000 in costs.

Weekly swab testing at six different hospitals found 32 percent less
methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and 50 percent fewer cases of
vancomycin-resistant Enterococci -- two of the most common "superbugs" when
2,650 chlorhexine-bathed patients were compared to 2,670 patients at the same
hospitals washed with soap and water.

"Doing everything possible to ward of bloodstream infections and halt the spread
of these dangerous bacteria is essential to safeguarding our patients'
well-being, encouraging their speedy recovery and sparing valuable hospital
resources," study co-investigator Dr. Trish Perl of Baltimore's Johns Hopkins
Hospital said in a statement.



URL: www.upi.com


Copyright 2009 by United Press International

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