Saturday, August 25, 2012

HAI "Best Practices" database?


August 26, 2012   

Jorge Palacios

   California Department of Public Health (CDPH-CHCQ-HAI)

Re: Prevention of Hospital Associated Infections in our Veteran’s Hospitals

Dear Mr. Palacious,

 Once again, thank you and the staff of the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) for the work being done concerning patient safety.

 My advocacy for the prevention of Hospital Associated Infection (HAI) in our Veteran’s Hospitals and my review of the revised CDPH web site has led me to a few basic questions. Perhaps these questions should be directed to the Healthcare-Associated Infection Advisory Committee (HAI-AC), please let me know for future inquires.

1.      There is no reference to either accepted, planned or surveillance of “best practices” in the State of California concerning HAI on your website, do you agree with this statement?

2.      Is the CDPH monitoring developments concerning “best practices” concerning the prevention of HAI programs being funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in other states?

3.      Would the CDPH or the HAI-AC object to my advocacy, “hai-five”, soliciting California elected officials concerning the development of a “best practices database” for the prevention of HAI in the State of California to be followed  by the solicitation of our United State’s Federal elected officials to locate granting opportunities to establish and operate a pilot program.

4.      Could this database be offered “free of charge” combined with an initial “voluntary” participation to all California Medical Facilities, perhaps categorized System, Hospital, ACS?

 

Please understand my request does not ask for the “development” of the “best practices”, they already exist, in my opinion, some in the Government sector but most in the private sector but I would imagine the private sector HAI programs would be, if accepted, purchased at fare market value.

 Good or bad “practices” to start would not matter, your current “surveillance” system would be an excellent method to drive continuous improvements and drive the entire process to the level of “evidence based medicine” our Veteran’s deserve in my opinion!

 No response to this e-mail by September 11, 2012 would be considered a “no-comment” and would give my advocacy the direction to elevate my enquires to my State of California elected officials.  

 Do bare in mind that our  advocacy, “hai-five”, is dedicated to “supporting those who help others”, including all of the staff at the CDPH and hopefully the CDPH will consider our activities as an asset in the long term goal of “preventing” HAI in our medical facilities!

 

Sincerely,

Michael H. Slavinski 

 


 

"If we can improve the quality of care, that will translate into lower cost," Anthem President Pam Kehaly said. "These are real dollars”

 

Ps The attached picture is another U.S. Peace Corps project, a community incinerator. It is actually part of a “food security” project, not what you might think! It starts with a “micro bank” for the farmers, next teaching women groups how to process “shea” in the dry season to generate income to procure food in the non-productive seasons and the incinerator, if the pigs eat the plastic bags they “die”, you can understand the exemption of the “carbon footprint”, it also takes out a lot of mosquito breeding containers.

How important is “food security”, they are farmers, not enough land or anything else and the “rainy season” was three months late this year, “thank you global warming”!

 Sometimes I think my advocacy for the prevention of HAI in our Veteran’s Hospitals is just a bit too much but just watching what our kids are doing on the other side of the world makes my efforts seem quite humble!

No comments:

Post a Comment