Regina Leader-Post

Many die from hospital-acquired bugs

Details, extent of problem still murky

- TOM BLACKWELL

Kim Smith was no stranger to stress — her job in community correction­s often brought her face to face with members of Winnipeg’s violent street gangs.

But as she lay in a local hospital’s gynecology ward more than a year ago, nurses called her brother with an unusual question: Did Kim suffer from any kind of emotional troubles?

The woman, her caregivers said, had been telling them she wanted to kill herself.

It was a shocking turn of events, coming a week after Smith entered Winnipeg’s St. Boniface Hospital for a routine hysterecto­my and ovary removal. In the days since the operation, however, she had been complainin­g of escalating pain in her gut, so intense she began to fear for her life — and then apparently wanted to end it.

By the time medical staff took the woman’s complaints seriously, an infection inside her belly had developed into necrotizin­g fasciitis (flesheatin­g disease) and devoured large chunks of her abdomen.

Within hours of emergency surgery to drain “brown, foul-smelling liquid” and excise dead tissue, and four days after her 45th birthday, Smith was dead.

“She kept yelling at me, ‘I know my body, I know there’s something wrong in my stomach and nobody wants to listen to me. And I’m going to end up dying here,’” said Brenda Dyck, her sister-inlaw. “She died the most horrible, painful death anybody could suffer, and nobody would listen to her and reach out to her.”

Smith’s tragic demise was more dramatic than many cases of hospital-acquired infection (HAI). Necrotizin­g fasciitis is a frightenin­g, but rare, complicati­on. Still, about 8,000 Canadians a year die from bugs they contract in facilities meant to make them better, while many more see their hospital stay prolonged by such illness.

Yet after years of well-intentione­d work and millions of dollars spent on combating the scourge, the details and extent of the problem remain murky.

No national statistics document the number of surgical-wound infections like Smith’s, one of the most common types of hospitalac­quired pathogens.

A federal agency now publishes rates of sepsis, or blood infection, at individual hospitals, but their methodolog­ical value is a matter of debate. Government tracking of drug-resistant bacteria is patchy and of questionab­le practical use, say infectious­disease physicians.

“There is no question that at a national level, both our surveillan­ce for hospital-acquired infection and our surveillan­ce for anti-microbial resistance is not serving our needs,” said Allison McGeer, an infectious-disease specialist at Toronto’s Mount Sinai Hospital.

Meanwhile, important lessons about how diseases spread inadverten­tly within health facilities often come to light in fits and starts.

Two hospitals in Toronto and one in Quebec, for instance, announced independen­tly in the late 2000s that they had discovered contaminat­ed sinks were the source of separate, deadly outbreaks of infection.

Some word of the episodes got out through specialize­d medical journal articles, academic conference­s and sporadic news stories. But there is no systematic way of disseminat­ing such informatio­n across the system, said Darrell Horn, a former patient-safety investigat­or for the Winnipeg Region Health Authority.

“You could sit and call every hospital in the country, and ask them when was the last time they cleaned the sink in the (neonatal intensive care unit) and how they cleaned it, and you’d get nothing but blank stares,” he said.

Health care is paying much more attention, at least, to the HAI problem than it did a decade ago, said Dr. Michael Gardam, infection-control director at Toronto’s University Health Network.

After heavy media coverage of the mostly hospitalba­sed severe acute respirator­y syndrome (SARS) outbreak and deadly hospital infestatio­ns of Clostridiu­m difficile, health-care-related infection became a very public affair, said Gardam.

Hospitals started hiring more experts, encouragin­g hand-washing and generally striving to prevent infection, rather than just treating it after the fact as an unavoidabl­e cost of doing medical business.

Smith had few fears when she entered St. Boniface on Sept. 30, 2013, for an operation for uterine fibroids, her family says. She likely did not know that most surgical-wound infections arise from bacteria patients carry into hospital on their skin, which can then sneak inside through incisions, especially when infection-control safeguards are not optimum.

As early as the day after her operation, the Metis woman began to complain of pain in her abdomen, only to be told by nurses that she simply needed to walk about, Dyck recalls.

On Oct. 1, she complained of gastrointe­stinal bloating and discomfort; the following day, heartburn, bloating and slight nausea, the patient’s records note.

On Oct. 3, the chart refers to her feeling unwell and weak, then projectile vomiting. The next day, she had “lots of gas pains,” and the day after that abdominal pain “controlled with PO” (prescripti­on opioids).

Finally, early on Oct. 6, came the call about her selfdestru­ctive thoughts.

“Nurse found her confused, half-naked, pulled her IV out anxious. Saying she is at her end and is suicidal,” the chart said. A later notation suggested anxiety was prolonging her recovery and the sedative Ativan was administer­ed.

Then, sitting at her side 12 hours later, her brother Trevor Smith noticed a strange purple discolouri­ng of his sister’s feet, the kind of “mottling” that can be a sign of imminent death, and raised the alarm.

Smith was soon being wheeled into the operating room, where the surgeons who opened her up first observed “a large effluent of brown, foul-smelling liquid from the abdominal cavity.” They removed several abscesses, drained the liquid, then discovered the worst — necrotizin­g fasciitis expanding through the peritoneum (the lining of the abdomen) and abdominal muscles.

St. Boniface declined to comment on the case, saying it was prevented from doing so by provincial legislatio­n. But Dyck said one doctor told her staff had likely not adequately disinfecte­d her sister-in-law’s stomach before the hysterecto­my, ensuring any bacteria that came with her into the operating room stayed on the outside.

While not every surgical infection is preventabl­e, “they can be dramatical­ly minimized”, Gardam said.

Some provinces, such as Ontario and British Columbia, require hospitals to report to the government on a few common infections, such as C. difficile, blood infections transmitte­d by the “central lines” used to access major blood vessels, and pneumonia from ventilator use. Ontario hospitals must report their compliance with tactics designed to prevent surgical infections, though not the infections themselves.

Experts debate whether publicly reporting data actually benefits health care, but a 2012 study found that C. difficile rates in Ontario hospitals dropped by 25 per cent after the province started divulging statistics on the disease.

The Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n (CIHI) reports rates of sepsis, and stats that indirectly address infection, such as the rate of death and re-admission to hospital following some procedures.

Some infectious-disease specialist­s, though, are unimpresse­d by CIHI’s infection numbers, obtained by analyzing hospital records after the fact.

That is the goal of the Public Health Agency of Canada’s Nosocomial Infection Surveillan­ce Program. The program’s focus is drug-resistant bacteria, the increasing­ly familiar methicilli­n-resistant Staphyloco­ccus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant Enterococc­i (VRE) and C. difficile. It is based, though, on a sampling of just 57 teaching hospitals, a fraction of the country’s 250 or so acute-care hospitals. The SARS outbreak, for instance, erupted at a community hospital that is not part of that network.

Infectious-disease doctors have long complained that it takes too long for the data those hospitals submit to the Agency to be posted.

More complete, and easier to access, is the system developed by the European Centre for Disease Control, said Lynora Saxinger, an infectious-disease specialist at the University of Alberta. It not only tracks drug-resistant bugs, but matches those stats with the use — or possible over-use — of antibiotic­s, considered the main cause of the problem.

The latest concern of infectious-disease specialist­s is a class of antibiotic-defeating organisms known as carbapenem-resistant Enterobact­eriacaeae (CRE), a “game changer,” said Saxinger. The death rate is as high as 50 per cent. CRE is part of the public health agency’s surveillan­ce system, meaning those 57 hospitals submit their numbers.

Meanwhile, “the last CRE outbreak … I heard about it on the news,” said Saxinger.

There is no evidence Smith was infected with a drug-resistant organism, but by the time she went in for emergency surgery, it appears little could have saved her. Once begun, necrotizin­g fasciitis has a 70 per cent death rate.

Early the next morning, her blood pressure had sunk, the telltale black of more dead tissue had spread and she went into cardiac arrest, dying minutes later.

The hospital investigat­ed the incident and assured the family that lessons learned from it would be passed on to staff — and help future patients, says Dyck. Horn says his experience across Canada suggests it is unlikely those lessons will be shared with anyone else in the health-care system, or the public.

Meanwhile, Dyck says the sight of doctors and nurses fruitlessl­y attempting to revive her sister-in-law — her abdomen left open as part of the flesh-eating treatment — remains etched in her mind.

“It was just a terrible, terrible, painful death. And she knew she was going to die, that’s the worst thing.”

“SHE DIED THE MOST HORRIBLE, PAINFUL DEATH ANYBODY COULD SUFFER, AND NOBODY WOULD LISTEN TO HER AND REACH OUT TO HER.” BRENDA DYCK

 ?? LYLE STAFFORD /Postmedia News ?? Brenda Dyck, the sister in-law of Kim Smith holds her portrait as her father, Gord Smith, right, and brother Trevor Smith, centre, look on in her Winnipeg, Manitoba home. Kim Smith, went to hospital last year for an elective hysterecto­my. She
died...
LYLE STAFFORD /Postmedia News Brenda Dyck, the sister in-law of Kim Smith holds her portrait as her father, Gord Smith, right, and brother Trevor Smith, centre, look on in her Winnipeg, Manitoba home. Kim Smith, went to hospital last year for an elective hysterecto­my. She died...

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