Mumbai: 54 private and public hospitals in India and seven years in 200 ICUs have found more than 8,600 cases of severe blood flow infections associated with mismanagement of tubes inserted into large veins to distribute drugs and fluids. These are called central lines, with newborns the most risk. About 40% of patients with central line infection died within two weeks. Rate: 8.83 central line transition per 1,000 central line-day, which means nine infections for every 1,000 days which were used by central lines. In the Lancet only in the study, 9,77,052 central line-day was recorded. The figures are much higher than reported in the US, where the rate in 2020 (Kovid Year) was also 0.87 per 1,000.
Doctors said that newborns are unsafe for most infections, and when they require central lines in the ICU, the risk increases. The study, ‘infection in adults infections infections (central -line -lined bloodstream infections) in infections’, 87% acinetobacter and 78% Clabciella infection – were resistant to two most common criminals – in such cases, a class of antibiotics considered a final resistant. Another criminal, Candida Oris – a fungal infection known for its drug resistance – was also a frequent cause. They reach central lines through contaminated hands, equipment or drugs, and enter the bloodstream.“The third line antibiotics such as carbapenums are a random use as they are most effective for the point that they are now being made useless. We have allowed infectious pathologist Dr. Hemlata Arora at Nanavati Hospital in Mumbai. Hemlata Arora said that we have allowed this resistance to develop this resistance due to lack of monitoring mechanisms and guidelines. Microbiologist of BJ Medical College, Pune, Dr. Rajesh Karkarte said that most of the anti-fungalles fail before Candida Eris and it is most difficult to get out of hospital settings: “Resistance rate to bacterial infection is worrying. Carbapenems have proved to be the safest. After all, doctors may have to switch to alternative antibiotics for some infections that may be more toxic. ,Operated between 2017 and 2024, the research was led by healthcare -linked transition monitoring networks and coordinated by AIIMS, New Delhi, which had funding from the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention. All the microbiologists, writers from all over India have written that the rate of infection was at the peak in 2020-21, coincide with Kovid, when ICUs played a role likely to be overwhelmed by staff shortage and stressful transition-control practices. The next year the rates fell, but rebounded, which led them to concluded that the issue was constant.Dr. Arora said that the central line is obliged to transmit infections but the point is to reduce the phenomenon. He said, “The rate of infection varies from the hospital to the hospital. In large hospitals, it is 1 or 2 per 1,000 central line days. Small hospitals can have 15 to 20, even 30 to 40 per 1,000 per 1,000,” she said.A pediatrician and infectious pathologist from Mumbai said, “In most government and semi-gowat setup, doctors as well as affiliated employees are overwork due to lack of employees. Very sick patients often require prolonged use of central lines, and for children, do not heal to reduce the needle’s prick.,