PDA

View Full Version : UK Hospitals "infested with vermins"


Altron
08-05-2008, 09:59 PM
Hospitals 'infested with vermin'
Rat
Rats have been regularly found in hospitals

The cleanliness of most NHS hospitals in England is threatened by frequent invasions of rats, fleas, bedbugs, flies and cockroaches, a report claims.

Figures released by the Conservatives show that 70% of NHS Trusts brought in the pest controllers at least 50 times over a two-year period.

Vermin were found in wards, clinics and even operating theatres. A patients' group said the situation was revolting.

But health chiefs played down fears the infestations could lead to disease.


If these hospitals were restaurants they would be closed down and out of business

Patients Association

The figures were obtained by the Conservatives under the Freedom of Information Act, with every hospital asked to reveal how often pest controllers had visited between January 2006 and March this year.

Of those who replied, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust topped the table, with more than 1,000 incidents, and five other trusts passed the 800 mark. All the respondents had reported some pest problem in the two-year period.

Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust said that, as the fourth largest in England, it was likely to encounter more pest control problems, and might be recording incidents differently to other trusts.

Wasps in theatre

While most infestations involved non-clinical areas, some trusts reported problems nearer to patients.


VERMIN IN HOSPITALS
Maggots in a patient's slippers
Fleas in a neonatal unit
Sterile store infested with mice
Mouse droppings in a clinic
Wasp nest in A&E

One had wasps in a neo-natal unit, and flying ants on the main wards, while another reported rats in their maternity unit, and wasps in operating theatres.

A children's A&E was infested with flies, and main wards were also home to mice, silverfish, biting insects and beetles.

Other common problems included bedbugs, fleas and cockroaches.

Shadow health secretary Andrew Lansley said: "Labour have said over and over that they will improve cleanliness in our hospitals, but these figures clearly show that they are failing."

'Remote risk'

Both the Department of Health and the Health Protection Agency (HPA) were sceptical of suggestions by the Conservatives that the presence of insect infestations could help spread infections among patients.


MOST PEST CONTROL VISITS
Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust: 1,070
Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust: 898
Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust: 857
Pennine Acute Hospitals NHS Trust: 855
Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust: 813
Barts and the London NHS Trust: 801
York Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust: 690
Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust: 658
Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust: 450
East Kent Hospitals NHS Trust: 416
Between January 2006 and April 2008

Full list of hospitals with problems

A spokesman for the HPA said: "In countries with good standards of healthcare the possibility for insects or pests to transmit infections in hospitals would be very remote.

"In the UK, wounds are treated appropriately and dressings applied to ensure good hygiene and prevent infection."

However, a spokesman from the Patients Association was unconvinced: "Such findings are truly revolting.

"How can patients be safe amid bedbugs, fleas and rats? These findings reveal what happens when money is taken away from where patients expect to see it spent.

"If these hospitals were restaurants they would be closed down and out of business."

The responsibility for monitoring hygiene in the NHS falls to the Healthcare Commission, and the expert leading its healthcare infection programme, Christine Braithwaite, said that it had received "negligible" numbers of reports about the threat posed by vermin.

"Clearly, it may be necessary to take action against pests in these large public buildings from time to time.

"However, it is important for hospital trusts to have robust procedures in place to deal with any pest problems."

The Commission also said it would use the information to inform its hospital hygiene inspection programme.

Health Minister Ivan Lewis said that hospitals were responsible for ensuring their buildings were clean and that patient safety was not compromised.

"The Hygiene Code requires NHS bodies to have a pest control policy that anticipates and manages this issue.

"Trusts should take rapid action and follow through with surveillance in place to avoid pest incidents and minimize hazards.

"Use of pest control is a sign of good proactive management."

Link:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7542718.stm

Cair
08-05-2008, 10:04 PM
Oh god that's gross.


I'd scream if maggots were in my slippers. :argh

Tokoyami
08-05-2008, 10:13 PM
Oh these cockroaches....

There part of our new insect therapy!

Juno
08-05-2008, 10:48 PM
Figures released by the Conservatives-

What, you mean that political party that has been fairly dedicated to destroying the NHS, and the party who under Thatcher basically crippled the NHS leading to its current condition?

Sure, Labour have failed to improve it, but Tories seem to forget who took the NHS when it was in it was an enviable national health service and managed to turn it into an unfixable money drain that would plague the next Labour government endlessly.

Most people would have the decency to be ashamed of what they did to a health service that provided care for the less well off, but these guys are undeniably proud of the fact that it continues to fail.

Lord Yu
08-05-2008, 10:51 PM
Remind me not to get sick in the UK.

fieryfalcon
08-05-2008, 10:58 PM
Welcome to government run medical care.

Kunoichi no Kiri
08-05-2008, 11:03 PM
What, you mean that political party that has been fairly dedicated to destroying the NHS, and the party who under Thatcher basically crippled the NHS leading to its current condition?

Sure, Labour have failed to improve it, but Tories seem to forget who took the NHS when it was in it was an enviable national health service and managed to turn it into an unfixable money drain that would plague the next Labour government endlessly.

Most people would have the decency to be ashamed of what they did to a health service that provided care for the less well off, but these guys are undeniably proud of the fact that it continues to fail.

I do not believe "those other guys broke it and it's too hard to fix" is a viable or responsible thing to say in politics, even considering the remote chance it's true.

Simulacrum
08-05-2008, 11:14 PM
Why would Americans want this shit to come over here? I doubt this kind of story is going to get much play with the US media, sadly. =\

Kunoichi no Kiri
08-05-2008, 11:15 PM
Why would Americans want this shit to come over here? I doubt this kind of story is going to get much play with the US media, sadly. =\

It's a fun argument against nationalized healthcare.

Xion
08-06-2008, 01:15 AM
In America even our worst hospitals don't have vermin. :hmpf

Pilaf
08-06-2008, 01:20 AM
In America even our worst hospitals don't have vermin. :hmpf

Yes they do...check out the obese patients squeezed into gowns sucking up all our tax dollars with their diet of Crackdonald's and smoking cigarettes.

Ashiya
08-06-2008, 04:25 AM
Yikes....all that in hospitals, where sanitary precautions should have been prioritised?

:S

Juno
08-06-2008, 08:21 AM
I do not believe "those other guys broke it and it's too hard to fix" is a viable or responsible thing to say in politics, even considering the remote chance it's true.

Are you at all aquainted with UK politics? I'm not defending Labour, as they're even further right than the Tories these days, but considering the Conservative agenda here, their gloating at the failure of a system that they did their best to destroy is rank galling.

Whether or not you like socialised health care, there is no mistaking in Britain exactly who caused it's downfall.

SP
08-06-2008, 08:31 AM
:uwah :uwah :uwah

Are you at all aquainted with UK politics? I'm not defending Labour, as they're even further right than the Tories these days, but considering the Conservative agenda here, their gloating at the failure of a system that they did their best to destroy is rank galling.

Whether or not you like socialised health care, there is no mistaking in Britain exactly who caused it's downfall.

This is true.