Branson calls MRSA problem "horrific"

Tue Dec 23, 2008 9:25pm GMT
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain faces a "horrific" problem with hospital superbugs, entrepreneur Richard Branson said on Tuesday, accusing politicians and hospital bosses of tinkering with the problem but not doing enough to solve it.

The Virgin Group chairman, speaking in his role as vice-president of the Patients Association, said one in 10 people who go into hospital suffer an "adverse event." He said more action was needed to deal with the spread of infection.

"In the airline industry, if we had that kind of track record we would have been grounded years ago," he told the BBC.

"Therefore the airline industry has a spectacularly good track record and that certainly ... doesn't apply to the NHS."

Branson called for all staff to be checked for the superbug MRSA and those who were carriers of the infection -- which he said could be up to 30 percent of people working in hospitals -- should be treated before they dealt with patients again.

He said the disruption would be better than the pain and misery caused by an unnecessary death.

Cases of MRSA have fallen significantly in recent years and the most recent figures showed there had been 725 cases reported between July and September, down 33 percent compared to the same period last year.

But England's health watchdog, the Healthcare Commission, said in October that a quarter of NHS bodies were failing to meet basic standards of infection control designed to combat superbugs.

Branson said patients should have the right to know about the track record of hospitals, doctors and wards, and managers should be sack if they failed to meet NHS rules.  Continued...

 
This Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) computer screen image shows an online forum called "Dark Market" where it educates users where to buy skimming devices to penetrate bank accounts, how to distribute malware through spam, and buy stolen credit cards among other things. Even as authorities try to stamp out that con and other e-mail and online scams, scammers are getting more wily and finding new loopholes to exploit. The vast majority of e-mail is spam and an unknown percentage of that is meant to defraud.
Cybercrime warning

Criminals are attacking small and medium-sized companies that don't have the inclination, money or expertise to prevent cybercrime.  Full Coverage 

Photo

Most Popular General News on Reuters UK

  • Articles
  • Videos