Toward Elimination of Healthcare-Associated Infections
Presented on .
On Thursday, October 15, Dr. Frieden introduced the second session of the Public Health Grand Rounds entitled “Toward Elimination of Healthcare-Associated Infections,” a presentation on healthcare-associated infections presented by Chesley Richards, MD, Deputy Director DHQP.
P.J. Brennan, MD, who has been instrumental in establishing Pennsylvania as the first state to report HAI data hospital-wide, led a focused discussion along with Barry Straube, MD, who discussed the role that Medicare and Medicaid will play in eliminating HAIs.
This presentation is not available in video format. For presentation contents, see the presentation slide deck [1.6 MB, 81 pages].
- Chesley Richards, MD, MPH
- Deputy Director, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion
National Center for Preparedness, Detection, and Control of Infectious Diseases, CDC
- Patrick J. Brennan, MD
- Professor of Medicine
Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Health System
- Barry M. Straube, MD
- Chief Medical Officer
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
- Tanja Popovic, MD, PhD
- Scientific Director
Get notified about the latest updates from Public Health Grand Rounds right in your inbox by setting up an alert today!
Get notified about the latest updates from Public Health Grand Rounds right in your inbox by setting up an alert today!Sign Up
Get notified about the latest updates from Public Health Grand Rounds right in your inbox by setting up an alert today!
While some organ transplantations are life-saving procedures, serious illness and death can occur from undetected infections in donor organs and tissues. New advances exist that make transplants safer. Learn what CDC and its partners are doing to actively reduce the risk of unusual transplant-associated infections.
When it comes to tracking infectious diseases and outbreaks, determining who is infected with a particular pathogen is the first step. Newer tests are making these determinations faster, but they lack crucial information. Hear about the challenges and promises of the changing landscape of diagnosing infectious diseases.