iFocus.Life News News - Breaking News & Top Stories - Latest World, US & Local News,Get the latest news, exclusives, sport, celebrities, showbiz, politics, business and lifestyle from The iFocus.Life,

Why Protective Clothing in Hospitals Is So Important

103 20
Whether used in an old person's facility, while caring for an unwell patient at home or in a conventional hospital, protective clothing and basic cleaning sanitation remains an ever-important part of caring for sick people.
Without it, germs can cling to other garments of clothing and are given a license to roam - spreading antibodies and causing harm to a wide number of frequently weak and susceptible men and women.
Great Ormond Street Hospital, the world-famous children hospital in London, estimates that around ten per cent of people acquire an infection while spending time in hospital - and the figure is known to be higher for those patients in intensive care or with low immune systems.
And although it's well known in medical circles that not wearing the correct clothing and neglecting to fully clean hands before heading into susceptible areas is a great way, there are still hundreds of preventable illnesses and diseases that are spread because of poor practice.
Unfortunately, there are still millions of people who remain uninformed about the dangers of not wearing protective clothing in hospitals.
In a hospital or in other crucial care environments, the margins between good health and a patient deteriorating rapidly can be very small indeed, so it's absolutely vital to take every precaution to prevent bugs spreading.
Research also shows that bugs which may seem relatively harmless on the outside in normal life, turn into feared debilitating killers when they come into contact with vulnerable, helpless patients, whose antibodies and resistance to illness are much weaker than normal people.
Thousands of deaths occur every year across Britain as a result of a common cold, flu or a soft virus that's been carried to helpless patients.
That's the reason protective clothing is so important: even when we're carrying small illnesses and ailments that aren't strong enough to affect us, they can still have a devastating impact on weaker members of society.
Only by wearing effective protective clothing in hospitals and extensively washing hands can we neutralise potentially fatal bugs and illnesses - even when they seem to be small enough to not worry about.
There are also more high-profile maladies that protective clothing in hospitals guards against.
We all know that HIV and AIDS is one of the biggest killers worldwide, and dirty, blooded clothing is one of the ways that the deadly virus is transmitted.
Although it is also carried around through shared needles, bodily fluids and mixing of blood, some cases of HIV have been contracted as a result of medical professionals and hospital visitors meeting with stricken patients and accidentally transmitting the deadly infection to others.
Predictably, doctors and nurses are some of the people who have a most pressing need for proper protective clothing: from shoe and hair caps, to fully neutralised clothing and aprons to prevent bugs spreading.
And thankfully, the huge majority of care facilities across Great Britain and abroad are committed to using protective clothing in hospitals, and helping patients in every way that they can.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up here to get the latest news, updates and special offers delivered directly to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe at any time
You might also like on "Health & Medical"

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.