Hospitals Must Act Against Pathogenic Bacteria, Says Mario Pinca

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“It is time to act decisively against pathogenic bacteria. They can cause serious impacts on patient health in hospitals”, Says Copma

“In Brindisi, was everything possible done in terms of prevention?" said Mario Pinca, CEO of Copma, a leading Italian healthcare services provider. Pinca made his remarks following the decision of a public prosecutor to open an investigation into the death of 19 patients at the Perrino hospital in Brindisi last week.

More than 25,000 citizens die every year in Europe because of growing resistance to existing antimicrobials; and between 8% and 12% of patients in EU hospitals suffer adverse events, almost half of which could be avoided.”

“The deaths may be linked to the Klebisella bacterium, in its multiresistent form. We will have to wait for the outcome of the investigation; but what we can say, is that it is possible to reduce the risk of transmission of hospital-associated infections (HAI), facing decisively the problem of hygiene in hospitals through a multidisciplinary action; with the innovative hygiene PCHS system, based on probiotic bacteria, it is possible to effectively counteract the potentially pathogenic bacteria”

Pinca referred to a recent study by La Fauci V et al., which was published in J Microb Biochem Technol 2015, last in a series of important international scientific publications. The study titled ‘An Innovative Approach to Hospital Sanitization Using Probiotics: In Vitro and Field Trials’ assessed how hospital infections continue to be a huge healthcare problem worldwide to which no facility, public or private, is immune.

“Tackling this global challenge requires local and European action. Traditional hygiene methods are not sufficiently effective,” said Pinca. What the La Fauci study demonstrates is that: “Environmental sanitization is an essential and effective part of programmes to prevent and control hospital infections.”

La Fauci argues that: “Sanitization procedures in hospitals, combined with antibiotic prophylaxis for patients, are designed to reduce and prevent the proliferation of microorganisms. Nevertheless, nosocomial infections continue to be a problem, even in hospitals where meticulous sanitization procedures are in place.”

The importance of inanimate surfaces as sources of nosocomial pathogens has long been recognized… but the most common environmental sanitization methods involve the use of chemical disinfectants… [but] these are not without disadvantages: 1) the limited effectiveness of biocides over time (normally 20-30 minutes after application, after which microorganisms multiply exponentially); 2) the ability of microorganisms to mutate thereby annihilating the biocidal effects; 3) increased pollution of the natural environment arising from the massive use of chemicals that may accumulate and persist over time.”

“The modern ‘first line of defence’ should be the PCHS system,” said Alberto Rodolfi, President of Copma. “What we know from extensive peer reviewed research and from a consolidated operating experience, is that the PCHS system significantly improves the level of hygiene in hospitals and reduces the presence of pathogens.”

“La Fauci’s research points to the effectiveness of the PCHS system and of the ‘Probiotic bacteria’,” said Rodolfi. “Their research enhances our understanding of how spores of Bacillus spp work effectively. Probiotic bacteria are considered to be innocuous microorganisms, but importantly, unlike disinfectants, they do not act as biocides. Meaning, that the probiotic bacteria can colonize surfaces to which they are applied following the PCHS protocol, effectively limiting the proliferation and survival of other types of bacteria, including germs, by a process of ‘competitive exclusion’.”

La Fauci’s study reports that: “Probiotics are ecological, easy to use and biodegradable. They render the environment hygienically stable and are able to survive on and colonize non biological surfaces, combatting the proliferation of other bacteria. In this study… conducted through the Probiotic Cleaning and Hygiene System (PCHS) at the laboratory of the Cardiological Operational Unit for the Hospital Hygiene at the University Hospital of Messina in vitro and field… they were also found to perform well on surfaces in the hospital environment that are subject to regular recontamination… Probiotics are therefore effective innovative products for sanitizing the hospital environment and constitute a valid “green” alternative to the chemical disinfectants used up to now.”

“What this means,” said Rodolfi, “is that European healthcare can be revolutionised with a simple change of hygiene policy. The terrible scale of death in Brindisi’s Perrino hospital, if proven to be caused by hospital hygiene, will simply be the tip of the iceberg. It’s time Europe’s governments act to stop antimicrobial resistance and to make our hospitals safe and environmentally healthy centres for care, not contagion.”

Keywords: Hospital sanitization; PCHS; Probiotics; Nosocomial infections

Photo Captions:

1. Mario Pinca, CEO of Copma

2. Alberto Rodolfi, President of Copma

For More Information

Contact:

Press Liaison Officer

Email: press@copma.it

Tel: +39 (0) 5 3297 0611 

www.copma.it

NOTES FOR EDITORS

WATCH: Our Short Information Video: https://youtu.be/N-ql4kR9ABs

European Blueprint for Safer Healthcare

Between 8% and 12% of patients in EU hospitals suffer adverse events, almost half of which could be avoided. The commonest healthcare-related adverse events are healthcare-associated infections (HAIs), medication-related events and complications arising during or after surgical operations. 

COPMA SCRL

Copma is a co-operative company based in Ferrara, Italy, operating since 1971. Copma is structured to provide high quality services with particular reference to healthcare and hospitals throughout the Country.

OUR SERVICES

  • Cleaning and sanitizing environments in large communities: public administration, local authorities, health authorities and hospitals, industry, retail, exhibition grounds, airports, offices.
  • Cleaning and sanitizing ducts of air treatment systems: air conditioning, aspiration, in buildings of all types and sizes.
  • Maintenance, design and construction of green areas, public or private: parks, sports facilities, tree maintenance, mowing green areas, roads and highways.

THE COMPANY

The total number of employees - partners + non-members - at the end of 2014 was over 1,550.

We maintain a strong presence of women within our workforce - more than 94%


ENDS

Copma Press Team

Email: press@copma.it

Tel: 39 (0) 5 3297 0611 

www.copma.it 

COPMA SCRL,

Via Veneziani, 32-44124,

Ferrara, Italy 

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Quick facts

HAIs infect 4.1 million patients annually; and every year, 37,000 people in the EU die as a result of an HAI, even though 20%-30% of these infections are considered to be preventable by intensive hygiene and control programmes.
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Quotes

...the La Fauci study demonstrates is that: “Environmental sanitization is an essential and effective part of programmes to prevent and control hospital infections.”
Environmental Sanitization Is Essential