FRIDAY, Jan. 13, 2017
(HealthDay News) -- Common viruses pose a serious threat in nursing
homes, often sabotaging standard infection control measures, a new case
study suggests.
"Long-term
care facilities have unique challenges. Infection-control policies from
acute care hospitals cannot simply be mirrored in this setting and
expected to work," said study lead author Dr. Schaefer Spires.
His
report details a 16-day outbreak of two viruses -- respiratory
syncytial virus (RSV) and human metapneumovirus (HMPV) -- that swept
through a long-term dementia ward in Tennessee. Nearly three-quarters of
the patients became sick and five died.
"RSV
and HMPV are viruses that need to be taken as seriously as we take the
flu, especially in older adults," said Spires, an assistant professor of
infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in
Nashville.
RSV causes infections of the lungs and respiratory tract. HMPV is a cold virus.
According to the report, 30 of 41 patients contracted at least one of the viruses and 15 were hospitalized.
The
outbreak led the facility to implement new protocols for protecting
these vulnerable patients.
These included active screening; more
efficient separation of ill and healthy residents during cold and flu
season; improved hand hygiene; use of personal protective equipment by
staff; and faster respiratory viral testing.
But
many of the health care providers also became sick, hindering efforts
to separate the sick from the healthy, the report said.
Also, dementia prevented many patients from reporting their symptoms, which delayed identification of new cases, Spires said.
The study was published Jan. 9 in the journal Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology.
"Early detection of a
contagious pathogen and identification of infected patients is important
when trying to prevent an outbreak. However, once a certain number of
residents were infected, we had almost no chance at preventing further
cases from developing," Spires said in a journal news release.
Thanks
to better technology, viruses other than influenza can be detected on a
more routine basis. As a result, "we are recognizing the importance of
RSV, HMPV, and other viruses in causing [illness] in the older adult
population," he added.
"There is a clear need for vaccines and new antivirals to aid our efforts in prevention of these viral infections," Spires said.
Full Article & Source:
Common Viruses a Deadly Threat at Nursing Homes
This reinforces the good argument that people are healthier and safer at home if at all possible.
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