UL Hospitals Group Begins Writing To Patients At Risk Of CPE Exposure

Photo (c) Clare FM

The UL Hospitals Group has begun writing to over two thousand patients who shared a ward or clinical area with a patient who tested positive for the superbug CPE.

Most people in Ireland who carry CPE have picked it up in a hospital and for the vast majority it lies harmlessly in the gut and never causes any illness.

CONTINUE READING BELOW

In August, the HSE announced that it was undertaking a national communications programme to write to patients who had been identified as being a CPE contact, based on recommendations from a National Expert Group.

Each hospital was asked to review files and compile a list of patients.

The UL Hospitals Group has now completed this and has begun writing to 2,160 patients, while their GPs and consultants will also be informed.

Anyone who shared a ward or clinical area with a patient who had a positive result for CPE has been designated a CPE contact.

There’s about a 1 in 20 chance that someone who’s designated a contact will become a carrier of CPE and a 1 in 400 chance that they might get a serious CPE infection at some point in the future.

CPE infection can be serious, but there are antibiotics that can be used to treat CPE infection.

A dedicated helpline is being provided to all CPE Contacts to answer any additional questions.