By most estimates, five percent of patients pick up an infection while at the hospital. Each year, that equates to nearly two million people ending up sicker than they were prior to being admitted to the hospital because of hospital-acquired infections. Many of these hospital-acquired infections are minor and pose no serous threat to life. In the United States, however, hospital-acquired infections are the fourth major cause of death! Even if you don't pick up a serious infection while in the hospital, do you want to extend your stay? Demanding cleanliness is the solution. Ask everybody, from doctors to visitors, to wash their hands or at least use a germ-killing sanitizer when they enter your room. No, rubbing your hands together doesn't generate enough heat to disinfect your hands; you must use soap, disinfectants, a sanitizing wand, or some other proven method to kill germs. Doctors should wash their hands each time they come in contact with a different patient. In reality, studies suggest that doctors typically do this only a third of the time. Patients typically have compromised immune functioning, and inert germs can often cause serious infection. Because of this, all visitors, even friends and family, must wash their hands when entering your room. Remember, that washing your hands is always better than using germ-killing sanitizers. Using these hand sanitizers, however, is always better than nothing.

Hand cleanliness is only half the battle. Make sure you request that stethoscopes, blood pressure cuffs, bed rails, the TV remote, and any other things you come in contact with are disinfected with a wipe. In a weakened state, germs can easily take hold and cause an infection, so cleanliness is the key.

Think this is a little overboard? What's particularly scary is that an increasing number of hospital infections are now caused by superbugs, antibiotic-resistant bacteria. One example, Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is hard to kill because of its resistance to multiple antibiotics. Do you want to be in a hospital with little means to combat an infection? The best way to combat these superbugs is to make sure you never get infected in the first place. Still not convinced? Betsy McCaughey, founder of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths, stated, "These infections (hospital-acquired) kill as many people each year in our country as AIDS, breast cancer, and auto accidents combined." While that number seems inconsistent with other studies and statistics, it certainly is cause for concern.



