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Five East Lancashire hospitals affected by winter vomiting bug


MEDICS are on alert after it emerged that five hospitals in East Lancashire have been hit by a winter vomiting bug.

Health bosses had revealed that the Royal Blackburn and Burnley General Hospitals were hit by the norovirus virus.

Now it has been confirmed that Accrington Victoria, Pendle Community and Clitheroe Community hospitals have also been affected.

Pendle Ward at Clitheroe Community Hospital, the only one of the five run by NHS East Lancashire, has seen six patients and one member of staff affected. The problem there is said to be ongoing.

The ward was closed to admissions and discharges to residential homes have been stopped.

Virus control teams have also been called in at Pendle Community Hospital, Leeds Road, Nelson, where two wards have been hit.

Reedyford Ward was reopened after another deep-cleaning exercise but four patients are still thought to be affected on Marsden Ward.

The first outbreak, lasting eight days, came at the end of November at Accrington Victoria Hospital’s Ward 2. Eleven patients and two staff were affected.

Three staff shifts were lost and the number of days that beds were blocked rose significantly for the month.

Deep-cleaning was carried out on the ward, which was reopened on December 30.

Another unit, ward 12 at Burnley General Hospital, was closed in December after six patients fell victim to the sickness virus. Several wards were also affected at the Royal Blackburn Hospital in December.

Beverley Aspin, East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust’s lead matron for infection prevention and control, said: “We continue to keep a close eye on all of our patients for signs and symptoms of winter vomiting viruses, however minor.

“We remain cautious, closing areas at early signs of vomiting or diarrhoea, so that spread of any gastric virus is minimised.”

She said that Reedyford Ward at Pendle was closed to new admissions as were four-bed bays in wards C1, C6 and B8 at Royal Blackburn.

Noroviruses are the most common cause of upset stomach in the UK. They spreads easily, which means outbreaks are common, particularly within contained environments such as hospitals, nursing homes and schools.

Comments(7)

Davidoff says...
10:42pm Thu 28 Jan 10

Oh dear. Must remember not to have to go to hospital, because I will get ill there.

jaffa90 says...
11:33pm Thu 28 Jan 10

nice one david,the last time i was s*ck was in Turkey 10years ago,it was the food.

Mikeee47 says...
11:44am Fri 29 Jan 10

once upon a time in a land called GREAT BRITAIN they had one of the best health sevices in Europe, A were safe havens, for the sick & wounded
Now you go in & come out with worse off, MRSA, C,Diff etc the list goes on & on.
Hospitals need to go back to basics & do everything in house like the old days where student nurses cleaned, & mopped as part of their Training & if it wasnt done right Matron had something to say, Let The people who know about health care run the Hospitals ie Doctors, consultants etc, as long as budget managers are running wards peoples health is and will suffer

Parly says...
4:25pm Fri 29 Jan 10

What’s with the blatant scaremongering?
.
Outbreaks are common in hospitals, care homes, schools etc because it spreads very easily from one person to another. Funnily enough, people tend to be admitted into hospital because they are unwell and if they or any relatives accompanying them into hospital have picked it up, it can cause problems – especially if a few others have been admitted with similar symptoms.
.
ALL hospitals have infection control policies and procedures and it’s standard practice to stop further admission and discharges until everyone has been 48hr symptom free.
.
This idea of specialist “virus control” ?? teams being drafted in (complete with NASA spacesuits and fumigation equipment) is ludicrous.
.
One last thing. There is no need to include “virus” after the word “Norovirus”....

Hopping mad says...
9:28pm Fri 29 Jan 10

Mikeee47 wrote:
once upon a time in a land called GREAT BRITAIN they had one of the best health sevices in Europe, A were safe havens, for the sick & wounded Now you go in & come out with worse off, MRSA, C,Diff etc the list goes on & on. Hospitals need to go back to basics & do everything in house like the old days where student nurses cleaned, & mopped as part of their Training & if it wasnt done right Matron had something to say, Let The people who know about health care run the Hospitals ie Doctors, consultants etc, as long as budget managers are running wards peoples health is and will suffer
Quiet down we're not supposed to talk about it... its called immigration.

The service quite frankly cope with the ammount of people anymore. You have to feel sorry for the nurse these days with the numbers they have to deal with and targets on waiting lists. They don't have time to make sure the place in which they're at risk is safe to do so. Still 50 million in cuts should just about wipe the nhs out. If only we had 50 million, oh thats right we're giving it to the taliban to shoot our troops.

Seems the morales and values of yester year have no place in modern briton, notice how I never mentioned great there.

Lifeinthemix says...
10:41pm Fri 29 Jan 10

Hi All.

I often wonder have any of you out there connected the dots here?
.
It would seem the biggest threat as it relates to picking up a virus is from the hospitals....
.
I think there is a big message in from this angle.

Mikeee47 says...
8:41pm Sun 31 Jan 10

Not many people come out of hospital these days, unless it's in a black Private ambulance, get my drift, Relatives are having to argue with staff because they're NOT looking after elderly patients, ie new dressing, leaving them in bed stinking of feceis, it unacceptable some of the care in Blackburn, I've seen it with my own eyes. so have the inspectors


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