healthcare
Environmental solutionsnews Covering infection prevention, medical waste management & sustainable practices
VOL. XII NO. 3
Attention Readers !
www.HealthcareEnvironmentalSolutions.com
fall 2016
The Nose Knows
Are you looking for Products, Equipment or Services for your business or healthcare facility?
If so, please check out these leading companies advertised in this issue: industry associations Medical Waste Management Association – pg 4
Infectious & Non-Infectious Waste Containers & Linen Carts Snyder Industries – pg 6 TQ Industries – pg 5 Infectious Waste Sterilizing Systems Clean Waste Systems – pgs 9 & 12 Gient Heating Industry Co – pg 7 The Mark-Costello Co – pg 6 Shredders Shred-Tech – pg 5 Vecoplan LLC – pg 3
Dog to Sniff Out C. Difficile at Canadian Hospital
V
By P.J. Heller
ancouver General Hospital’s newest staff addition has his work cut out for him: nosing around to track down potentially deadly bacterium in the medical facility. But Angus, a 2-year-old English springer spaniel, is up to the task, according to his trainer, Teresa Zurberg. The cute floppy-eared dog is expected to start work sniffing out Clostridium difficile (also called C. difficile or C. diff) at Vancouver General, Canada’s second largest hospital, before the end of September. “We strive to continue to find ways to provide better care, and sometimes the answer is not more technology, but instead, man’s best friend,” said Terry Lake, the British Columbia health minister.
Angus will be the only active dog in the world to be used to sniff out reservoirs of C. diff and the first in Canada. A 2-year-old beagle named Cliff was previously used in a 2012 study to identify C. diff on 300 patients in two large Dutch teaching hospitals. C. diff is a highly contagious bacteria that cannot be seen with the naked eye. It causes diarrhea and other intestinal conditions and can be life-threatening. The number of C. diff infections in Canada has risen over the last decade — particularly among those who are taking antibiotics, the elderly in hospitals and nursing homes and those undergoing chemotherapy for cancer — and is linked with an increase in illnesses and
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