Federal Lawmaker Calls For ‘Superbug’ Prevention Investigation
Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., is asking a House committee to examine what the federal government is doing to prevent such infections. In the meantime, regulators are skeptical the instruments implicated in a superbug outbreak in California can be properly cleaned.
Los Angeles Times:
UCLA Superbug: Lawmaker Asks Congress To Investigate FDA Response
Prompted by the UCLA superbug outbreak, a federal lawmaker is calling on Congress to investigate what the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and device makers are doing to prevent further patient deaths and infections. In a letter sent Monday to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) said outbreaks related to contaminated medical scopes “have national security ramifications.” (Terhune, 2/23)
The Associated Press:
California Congressman Wants Hearing On Superbug Outbreak
Congress should launch an investigation into what the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is doing to prevent additional superbug infections after a deadly outbreak at a Los Angeles hospital linked to tainted medical scopes, a lawmaker said Monday. (2/23)
Los Angeles Times:
FDA Official Casts Doubt On New Method To Clean Scopes Linked To Infections
A senior Food and Drug Administration official voiced reservations about the new method UCLA's Ronald Reagan Medical Center is using to clean medical scopes linked to an outbreak of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The official also said Monday that the agency will require makers of any new devices to show that they can be cleaned more reliably. In the aftermath of the outbreak at UCLA, which contributed to the deaths of two patients, university officials began sterilizing the instruments, known as duodenoscopes, using a toxic gas. (Willman and Terhune, 2/23)
And nine groups call gun injuries a public health emergency --
Los Angeles Times:
Gun Injuries Are A Public Health Emergency, Nine Organizations Say
Seven medical specialty societies, the American Bar Assn. and the American Public Health Assn. on Monday joined forces to declare gun-related injuries, which annually kill an average of 32,000 Americans and harm nearly twice that number, "a public health crisis" that should be studied and solved "free of political influence or restriction." (Healy, 2/23)