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This is an excerpt from a member-only article. To read the article in its entirety, please login, subscribe, or try out HSC for 30 days.

California hospital hit with major fine for violating the ATD standard

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July 1, 2010

A California hospital was hit with a fine in April for violations of the state’s aerosol transmissible disease (ATD) standard—the only one currently on the books in the United States.

The Department of Industrial Relations’ (DIR) Division of Occupational Safety and Health, better known as Cal/OSHA, fined Alta Bates Summit Medical Center in Oakland $101,485 for violating numerous state health and safety standards that contributed to a hospital employee and an Oakland police officer developing bacterial meningitis.

Cal/OSHA also fined the Oakland police and fire departments for failing to limit emergency workers’ exposure to the contagious disease.

Along with a respiratory therapist at the hospital, an Oakland police officer was also exposed to the patient with bacterial meningitis in December. Both required hospitalization, although they survived the illness.

On May 18, the hospital officially submitted an appeal to retract the fine, according to a spokesperson at the DIR.

The significant fines should be a clear warning to other California hospitals. Clearly, hospitals in California need to embrace the new regulations or risk the fallout from enforcement, says Steven MacArthur, safety consultant at The Greeley Company, a division of HCPro, Inc., in Marblehead, MA.

“The advice to hospitals is to refrain from dragging their feet when it comes to the evolution of regulatory standards,” MacArthur says.



This is an excerpt from a member-only article. To read the article in its entirety, please login, subscribe, or try out HSC for 30 days.

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Analyzing the Hospital Life Safety Survey

This book by former Joint Commission life safety surveyor Brad Keyes, CHSP, provides a practical, strategic approach to the life safety survey process. Keyes offers a room-by-room, floor-by-floor analysis of the life safety measures you need to have in place to avoid costly citations. He simplifies confusing Joint Commission standards and CMS requirements and reveals what you should be focusing on to pass your next life safety survey.

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