Ten Things You Can Do to Be a Safe Patient
July 6th 2011 03:14
Speak up.
Talk to your doctor about any worries you have about your safety and ask them what they are doing to protect you.
Keep hands clean.
Ask if you still need a central line [PDF - 191KB] catheter or urinary [PDF - 226KB] catheter. Leaving a catheter in place too long increases the chances of getting an infection. Let your doctor or nurse know if the area around the central line becomes sore or red, or if the bandage falls off or looks wet or dirty.
Ask your healthcare provider, "Will there be a new needle, new syringe, and a new vial for this procedure or injection?" Healthcare providers should never reuse a needle or syringe on more than one patient.
Be careful with medications.
Avoid taking too much medicine by following package directions. Also, to avoid harmful drug interactions, tell your doctor about all the medicines you are taking.
Get Smart about antibiotics.
Help prevent antibiotic resistance by taking all your antibiotics as prescribed, and not sharing your antibiotics with other people. Remember that antibiotics don't work against viruses like the ones that cause the common cold.
There are things you can do to reduce your risk of getting a surgical site infection. Talk to your doctor to learn what you should do to prepare for surgery. Let your doctor know about other medical problems you have.
Watch out for C. diff. [PDF - 179KB] (aka Clostridium difficile)
Tell your doctor if you have severe diarrhea, especially if you are also taking an antibiotic.
Know the signs and symptoms of infection.
Some skin infections, such as MRSA, appear as redness, pain, or drainage at an IV catheter site or surgical incision site. Often these symptoms come with a fever. Tell your doctor if you have these symptoms.
Get your flu shot.
Protect yourself against the flu and other complications by getting vaccinated.
By following these 10 steps, you can help make healthcare safer and help prevent healthcare-associated infections.
HAIs are not only a problem for individual healthcare facilities – they represent a public health issue that requires many people and organizations to work together in a comprehensive effort to attack these largely preventable infections. CDC is working with partners and states to implement infection prevention tools toward the elimination of HAIs.
CDC acknowledges the work of several partners who are focused on safe healthcare:
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
American Hospital Association (AHA)
Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC)
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Consumer's Union
Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE)
Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration
Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)
The Joint Commission
Safe Care Campaign
Safe Injection Practices Coalition
Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA)
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