Tennessee Hospitals Improve Quality, Infection Control

Patients at hospitals in Tennessee are safer on several key measures today than they were three years ago, due in part to the work by the Tennessee Center for Patient Safety, according to a news release.

 

Sign up for our FREE E-Weekly for more coverage like this sent to your inbox!



The Tennessee Center for Patient Safety is a collaboration among the Tennessee Hospital Association, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee Health Foundation and 122 hospitals across the state. Findings from center's 2010 annual patient safety report including the following key points:

•    Hospitals working with the Tennessee Center for Patient Safety reported a 36 percent reduction in central line infections from 2008-2010.
•    Central line infections among neonatal or infant patients were reduced 46 percent over the same time period.
•    The incidence of hospital-onset MRSA dropped 21 percent.
•    The rate of complication after surgery improved 15-60 in five critical areas at 10 Tennessee hospitals that participated in a surgical quality improvement pilot project.
•    The Tennessee Center for Patient Safety estimates the combined improvements among Tennessee hospitals translates to more than $11 million in savings.

Related Articles on Hospital Quality:

Employees Can Get Vaccinated or Terminated at Children's Medical Center of Dayton
Florida Hospital Could Lose Medicare Status Over Patient Safety Deficiencies
Provena Hospital in Illinois Keeps Medicare Status After State Department's Re-Survey

Copyright © 2024 Becker's Healthcare. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy. Cookie Policy. Linking and Reprinting Policy.

 


Patient Safety Tools & Resources Database

Articles We Think You'll Like

 

Featured Whitepapers

Featured Webinars