Several children have died at the Children’s Hospital in New Orleans after a horrifying outbreak of a flesh-eating fungus. The infectious fungus was spread by bed linens, towels and gowns, and new reports are raising serious questions about how the infections originated and why nothing was done to stop it for nearly a year. Medical malpractice lawyers at Pintas & Mullins Law Firm look into the serious and dire issue of hospital-acquired infections.
The details of the deaths at Children’s Hospital are gruesome. The first victim was a premature infant in the ICU who suffered an open wound from his groin to his abdomen. The most recent victim was a ten-year-old, who died with her face wasted away almost completely.
Other patients were forced to undergo dozens of surgeries to try to save their small bodies from the flesh-eating infection known as mucormycosis. The invasive fungal infection has an extraordinarily high fatality rate and primarily affects patients with compromise immune systems.
It took ten months after the death of the first victim for doctors to connect the dots between fatalities. Medical researchers identified the hospital’s bed linens as the source that carried mucormycosis throughout the facility, where it came into contact with vulnerable patients and killed them between August 2008 and July 2009.
According to investigations, the infections went undetected for so long because of defects in the hospital’s infection controls and negligent handling of contaminated linens. Hospital workers would clean all linens on the same dock where medical waste was removed, would transport both clean and dirty linens on the same carts, and store linens in hallways covered in debris from construction.
Hospital officials did not notify the families of the five victims until after a report was published on the issue. Even the head of the hospital’s infection control committee told the New York Times that he was not aware of the first infant’s mucomycosis at the time.
Hospital-Acquired Infections throughout the Country
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About 75,000 patients die every year from infections acquired from health care facilities – and the number of deadly fungal infections is on the rise. In response, the CDC recently started a program to help hospitals communicate with the public about infections and hospital errors. Hospitals taking initiative in this effort are enjoying significant gains in public trust.
Surprisingly, mucomycosis is not on the list of diseases that hospitals must report to the government. The infection can start as a small irritation or small black spot, which later spreads into nearby areas of the body, ravaging the skin and internal tissue.
Fungi can thrive in any moist environment, including a washroom or near water sources. TLC Linen Services, which provided and maintained linens for the hospital, is located just a few blocks from a large lake in New Orleans and includes a 40,000-square-foot washing warehouse. Moldy environments or those with inadequate ventilation systems can also cause fungi to thrive and spread.
Three families of the mucomycosis victims have filed lawsuits against the hospital so far, one of which was recently settled in an undisclosed amount. Hospital linens must always be wrapped in bags or cellophane while being transported; if not, fungi and other infections can spread rapidly.
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Depositions from TLC Linen Services reveal that hospital workers were using washcloths as cleaning rags, placing laundry bags in trash bins, and trash in linen carts, and that the head of housekeeping at the hospital told his workers to stop delivering clean linens in sealed bags.
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Our team of medical malpractice attorneys has been working on cases of hospital-acquired infections for nearly three decades. We have our own team of investigators who will look into your case – free of charge – to determine, when, why and how you or your loved one was infected. We know how devastating these types of cases can be on families, and we want you to focus on healing while we pursue your legal rights. Contact our firm for a free, no-obligation case evaluation today.
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