ChatterBank8 mins ago
Cleanliness in hospitals
17 Answers
Just heard that as of 3rd january that if hospital staff are caught not washing their hands after going to the loo they will be sacked in a zero tolerance move to cut down on infection.
Is this true ?
And if so do you think its a good ideA?
I FOR ONE THINK ITS AN ESSENTIAL PART OF THEIR JOB AND IF THEY ARE SO CARELESS ABOUT HYGIENE THEN MAYBE THEYRE NOT THE RIGHT PERSON TO BE WORKING WITH SICK PEOPLE
Is this true ?
And if so do you think its a good ideA?
I FOR ONE THINK ITS AN ESSENTIAL PART OF THEIR JOB AND IF THEY ARE SO CARELESS ABOUT HYGIENE THEN MAYBE THEYRE NOT THE RIGHT PERSON TO BE WORKING WITH SICK PEOPLE
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Maybe a little bit harsh on instant sacking, a warning first yes, but yes i do agree its very important hygiene in hospitals, i used to work in a kitchen and when id been to the loo id away wash my hands in the sink in the toilets then go in the kitchen and was my hands again as you'd never know who'd touched the door into the toilets before you.
Makes no difference where it is leg, A lot of us go to Scottyland for our holidays, and we should expect the same conditions everywhere,
although my experience of Scottish hospitals, well to be exact Hospital, ( Raigmore inverness ) they were miles in front of England from a care point of view.
friendliness was a different matter,
although my experience of Scottish hospitals, well to be exact Hospital, ( Raigmore inverness ) they were miles in front of England from a care point of view.
friendliness was a different matter,
heres a wee game if youre visiting a hospital for whatever reason
if youre bored
sit outside a ward and count how many visitors and staff actually clean their hands with the bagterial gel stuff
youll be shocked
similarly when i worked in a pub
how many folk come out the toilet and then wash their hands?
this does remind me of the survey a few months ago saying womens hands harbour thousands more germs than mens !!!
if youre bored
sit outside a ward and count how many visitors and staff actually clean their hands with the bagterial gel stuff
youll be shocked
similarly when i worked in a pub
how many folk come out the toilet and then wash their hands?
this does remind me of the survey a few months ago saying womens hands harbour thousands more germs than mens !!!
i see the idea but i think it misses the point.
Even if every single nurse and doctor washed their hands religiously all the time (which I'm sure most do anyway!), relatives visiting could be carrying all sorts of bugs and nasties, if not inside their bodies then on their shoes, bags, clothes etc.
for me, the core issue is the penny-pinching politicians whose budgets force NHS procurement teams to employ cheap contract cleaners that couldn't care less?!
Even if every single nurse and doctor washed their hands religiously all the time (which I'm sure most do anyway!), relatives visiting could be carrying all sorts of bugs and nasties, if not inside their bodies then on their shoes, bags, clothes etc.
for me, the core issue is the penny-pinching politicians whose budgets force NHS procurement teams to employ cheap contract cleaners that couldn't care less?!
Our local hospital) has gel at every entrance to every ward, gel at patients bedside and the staff also carry gel on the trolleys. Staff and visitors are reminded to use the gel and, as a visitor, you have to ring a bell for entry to each ward.
I have watched their cleaning routines over the last year or two and it really is excellent - not a corner missed. So some hospitals have already got excellent routines in action.
The trouble is, you can only remind people, but it's really hard to enforce.
I have watched their cleaning routines over the last year or two and it really is excellent - not a corner missed. So some hospitals have already got excellent routines in action.
The trouble is, you can only remind people, but it's really hard to enforce.
It's not just hand-washing - it's a decline in the standard of hygiene generally, cut-backs on the number of staff employed to do the job, and a failure to use proper disinfectant. Despite what we're told, visitors don't bring the infections in - that's an excuse. Private hospitals have visitors too, and they don't experience the same high infection rates because they employ the necessary number of staff, they train them properly - and they use the right products for the job.