| Why did the Department of Defense ignore the CDC's warning before going into war? Leishmaniasis The Baghdad Boil Leishmania is a very variable bug, There still is much we do not know about it. Very few people in this country have any reason to know anything about it, whether they be MD's or whatever. Persistant skin rashes, blistery rashes on the scalp, sores or wounds that do not heal should all be considered for leishmaniasis. US Captives in Columbia come home with Leishmaniasis "the contractors were healthy and “very, very happy” but two suffered from the jungle malady leishmaniasis." Epidemic-Middle East-Iraq Over 180 children have been affected with Baghdad boil disease, or leishmaniasis, in Iraq's southern province of Qadissiyah, about 130km south of Baghdad, local officials said. Read here Is this just the tip of the iceburg? Contaminated Blood from US Supplies possibly infects Brit Soldiers on Frontlines Chagas Disease from Latin America Chagas'-positive donations have been reported in 34 states with the highest concentration in California, Florida and Texas, according to data compiled by the AABB. Leishmaniasis now in Thailand A Nakhon Si Thammarat man has been diagnosed with leishmaniasis disease. A number of animals have tested positive, too, the Provincial Livestock Office said. North Texas Leish Outbreak Numerous cases of the disease, called leishmaniasis, have been reported in troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. But for the first time, cases of this dangerous infection are appearing in North Texas in patients who have not traveled to endemic areas. !! Breaking News !! VA doctors owe family members a duty to warn them of potential risks when the veteran has symptoms of an infectious disease. Some (some 80%) in 296th hit by 'Baghdad Boil' read the story "There were some places that soldiers and other Vector Control workers absolutely wouldn't go because of leishmaniasis," says Manon. "It's almost like getting leprosy. It's bad news." Read the story Contact Marcie Hascall Clark 321 779 6799 Leishmaniasis Q & A Heads in the Sand On December 11, 2002 Barbara Herwaldt, a leishmaniasis expert with the CDC spoke before the DOD in reference to leishmaniasis and the soon to be war in Iraq. She warned them that Leishmaniasis would be a huge problem and that we were not prepared to deal with it. She told them that they would be in Iraq during the prime sandfly season. She explained that it was transmittable sexually, congenitally, and by blood transfusion. She requested that there be a ban on blood donations from Soldiers and Civilians returning from Iraq. This ban was not put in place until October of 2003, long after thousands of soldiers and contractors exposed to leishmaniasis returned to their homes. From the transcript "In conclusion, the infection and the disease--we have simplicity amidst complexity. We have recurring themes of being able to activate decades after latency; the possibility of at least intermittent long-term parasitemia; the transmissibility by blood transfusion but we don't know the level of risk, and the fact that visceral leish. can be fatal and even bloodborne leish. can be fatal. Cutaneous leish. can be chronic and morbid. No gold standard for diagnosis; no tests for mass screening; no great treatment and the treatment probably doesn't result in sterile cure; and the need for better understanding of the persistence and bioavailability of these parasites" All leishmaniasis is bloodborne We have no sterile cure. Transmitted Sexually, Congenitally, and by Blood Transfusion Leishmaniasis can take up to twenty years to present itself in a healthy person. We have a ban on blood donations for persons having been in Iraq or Afghanistan for one year .Did the DOD heed this warning and prepare our soldiers and civilian contractors for the possibility of becoming infected with Leishmaniasis from the bite of the sandfly in Iraq? NO Most soldiers were deployed without netting, without proper precautions. The contractors were totally on their own. They had no warning at all. Further there was no request for a ban on blood donations until early October 2003 requesting that one be put in place by the end of October. Leishmaniasis lives in stored blood for 30 days. |
A simple explanation of a complex bug Leishmania are one celled protozoan parasites which are normally spread by the bite of a sandfly. Hosts can be animals or humans depending on the type. Leishmania species from the gulf war region are generally considered to be from two categories. Cutaneous which normally presents as skin lesions that may eventually go away on their own. The other would be visceral which may or may not present with skin lesions and can attack organs and bones and is deadly if not treated. Some cutaneous species in the New World can cause mucosal leishmaniasis . A third, little spoken of leishmania is called viscerotropic. This leishmaniasis is thought by some to be a cause of the Gulf War Illness from our last war in the region. A More Scientific Explanation Leishmaniasis is caused by a heterogeneous group of protozoan parasites belonging to the genus Leishmania. Some Leishmania species primarily affect the skin; others are mainly internal. It has become increasingly clear that some species frequently associated with visceral leishmaniasis can produce skin lesions, and species usually found in the skin can disseminate viscerally. In addition, each clinical syndrome can be produced by multiple species. Although leishmaniasis occurs predominantly in people living in endemic regions, travelers to these areas can also be infected, even after less than one week of exposure. Cutaneous leishmaniasis has been reported in U.S. military personnel, primarily among those stationed in Iraq. (It’ s often called “the Baghdad boil.”) Returning combat veterans should be questioned about any skin rashes or lesions. Diagnosis of leishmaniasis must be confirmed by biopsy and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis, which is available at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., and Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas. Combat veterans referred to their local VA medical centers can be tested for leishmaniasis, and their biopsies can be sent to one of these facilities for final diagnosis. Leishmaniasis is transmitted from the bite of sand flies. Any rash or skin disorder that a combat veteran experiences during or after deployment to Southwest Asia should be investigated. While some skin disorders may be harmless, health care providers should rule out parasitic lesions as soon as possible. Evoluntionary Relation Between L Tropica and Visceral Leishmaniasis from Iraq Kolesnikov AA, Saf'ianova VM. Restriction analysis demonstrated that the cleavage pattern of kinetoplast DNA of visceral leishmaniasis causative agent from Iraq was similar to that of the anthroponotic cutaneous leishmaniasis causative agent Leishmania tropica, and differed from that of the kinetoplast DNA of Leishmania infantum and L. donovani, typical visceral leishmaniasis causative agents. Similarity was established both for maxi- and minicycle molecules of the kinetoplast DNA. Evolutionary relation between L. tropica and the causative agent of visceral leishmaniasis from Iraq is suggested. |
| Commentary The Truth about the "Iraqi Superbug" and the MIlitary's role in spreading it. By TREX at Firedoglake In many ways, the Bush Administration's "War on Terror" has been able to accomplish things that the terrorists themselves could only dream of. It has divided the American public against each other. It has stretched our military so thin that we would be helpless in the face of a real national emergency. And now, it has bred its own drug-resistant biological weapons, one of which is rapidly making its way through civilian hospitals from California to Canada, on to Germany and Anbar Province. It's called acinetobacter baumannii and the US military not only created the conditions that led to its development, but the Pentagon has played an active role in exporting it to the world and in the suppression of information that could have led to its containment. From Wired Magazine: I VISITED WALTER REED in 2004 to write about anesthesia on the front lines. As I spoke with an Army sergeant who had survived a brutal attack in Najaf, US senator John McCain and talk-radio host Don Imus came into the room to thank him for his service. When we walked out, McCain's assistant whipped out a bottle of sanitizing gel and passed it around. A nurse explained to me, "It's this bug that grows in the soil over there and gets blown into their wounds by IEDs. These poor guys are covered with it. Around here we call it Iraqibacter." Rumors were circulating at the hospital that insurgents dosed their homemade bombs with the flesh of dead animals. It's true that many species of acinetobacter flourish widely in the environment. Thriving colonies have been recovered from soil, cell phones, frozen chicken, wastewater treatment plants, Formica countertops, and even irradiated food all over the world. But the particular species causing the military infections, baumannii, is almost always found in just one environment - hospitals. Lenie Dijkshoorn, a senior researcher at Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands, has studied the bug since 1984. "My colleagues and I have been looking for Acinetobacter baumannii in soil samples for years, and we haven't found it," she says. "These organisms are quite rare outside of hospitals." Hear that? No acinetobacter baumannii in the soil of Iraq. However, it is found at every stop along the military "evacuation chain" from Iraq back to the US and Europe. Soon, however, the bug started popping up in other hospitals along the evacuation chain. More than 70 patients at Walter Reed eventually contracted acinetobacter infections of the blood. Other infected patients and carriers surfaced at Landstuhl, Bethesda, and Balad Air Base, the embarkation point for troops on their way out of Iraq. By early 2005, nearly one-third of the wounded soldiers admitted to the National Naval Medical Center had been colonized by the bacteria. But where did this superbug come from and what exactly does it do? All hospitals have nosocomial (secondary) bugs. This version of acinetobacter undoubtedly existed in a less virulent form in the medical facilities prior to the war, but the massive over-prescription of wide-spectrum antibiotics by American medical personnel is what gave it its ferocious drug-resistance. And as for what it does, this is what happened to 20-year-old Marine Jonathan Gadsden after he was severely injured by a road-side bomb and evacuated back to the US: At first, he did quite well. By early September, Gadsden was weaned off his ventilator and breathing on his own. For weeks he gradually improved. His buddies took him to a Washington Redskins game in his wheelchair, and the next day he navigated 50 feet with a walker. Soon Gadsden was transferred to a veterans' hospital in Florida called the James A. Haley Medical Center, where he offered to serve as the eyes of a fellow marine blinded in an ambush. The doctors told Zeada that her son might be able to go home by the end of October. But he still had mysterious symptoms that he couldn't shake, like headaches, rashes, and intermittent fevers. His doctors gave him CT scans, laxatives, methadone, beta-blockers, Xanax, more surgery, and more antibiotics. An accurate evaluation of his case was difficult, however, because portions of his medical records never arrived from Bethesda. If they had, they would have shown a positive test for a kind of bacteria called Acinetobacter baumannii. Gadsden died on October 22nd. His mother Zaeda Gadsden wanted to know why. She discovered that an autopsy was performed shortly after her son's death. The coroner recorded the "manner of death" as "homicide (explosion during war operation)" but determined the actual cause of death to be a bacterial infection. The organism that killed Gadsden, called Nocardia, had clogged the blood vessels leading to his brain. But the acinetobacter had been steadily draining his vital resources when he could least afford it. For weeks, it had been flourishing in his body, undetected by the doctors at Haley, resisting a constant assault by the most potent antibiotics in the medical arsenal. "No one said that my son had anything like that," Zeada says. "I never had to wear gloves or a mask, and none of the nurses did either. No one had any information." Now, don't you think that if the doctors at Bethesda knew that Gadsden had been colonized by this organism that they should have maybe told the personnel at Haley Medical in Florida? Curiously, no one saw fit to inform the veterans' hospital what Gadsden was bringing with him. But this is part and parcel with the government's strategy for "fighting terror" with speeches and photo-ops and letting the underfunded, ill-equipped military cope with the unintended consequences of their disastrously mis-planned war(s). The whole reason we have this bug is because the combat hospitals in Iraq have never been adequately supplied, sterilized, or maintained: Known as combat support hospitals or CSHs, these facilities had been hastily erected in tents and other temporary structures, in keeping with the Pentagon's goal of a lean and mobile fighting force. Maintaining sterile conditions in the desert required creative efforts. Sand blew through every available opening in the walls, and the 130-degree days took their toll on drugs, power supplies, and diagnostic equipment. To move trauma care closer to the action, the DOD deployed modified shipping containers called ISO boxes as portable operating rooms. It was standard procedure to have a dozen nurses, surgeons, and anesthesiologists in each box crowded around two patients undergoing surgery simultaneously - an infection risk in any hospital. At the 28th CSH near Camp Dogwood - home to more than 4,000 US and British soldiers - there was only one washer and dryer to launder all of the linen, including the surgical scrubs. Army nurses reported to the DOD that "sheets were more often than not soaked with blood and other body fluids - linen that covered the patients who were transferred back to Germany was not replaced." When hospital-grade disinfectants ran low, which was often, the supply crew stocked up on bleach from a local bazaar. The derelict infrastructure of the Ibn Sina, where Jonathan Gadsden was treated during his evacuation, bedeviled the staff's best infection-control efforts. Rainwater dripped into operating rooms and supply closets, and pigeons roosted in the ventilation system, wafting the smell of droppings into the surgical suites. (A request was filed to the Iraqi Ministry of Health in September 2003 to "eliminate bird feces" from the air ducts.) Clean sheets and scrubs were scarce at the Ibn Sina as well, because the civilian laundry contractor was apparently selling them on the black market. Ah, yes. Mr. Rumsfeld's "lean and mobile" army. What a smashing little war this is! The wounded soldiers were not smuggling bacteria from the desert into military hospitals after all. Instead, they were picking it up there. The evacuation chain itself had become the primary source of infection. By creating the most heroic and efficient means of saving lives in the history of warfare, the Pentagon had accidentally invented a machine for accelerating bacterial evolution and was airlifting the pathogens halfway around the world. But of course, once it figured out what was happening, the military took immediate measures to inform everyone at risk for infection and make sure that this menace never spread beyond its initial disease vectors, right? Wrong: As the bacteria spread through hospitals in the US and Europe, the DOD worked overtime to keep a lid on the rumors. In a PowerPoint presentation about acinetobacter and pneumonia delivered at the US Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, a slide labeled "How to handle the press" read: "Don't lie. Don't obfuscate. Don't tell them any more than you absolutely have to." Yes, like every other problem that has arisen in our nation's prosecution of the Bush Administration's "Great War on Terror", rather than deal with the issue in a frank, open, and effective manner, the governmen |



| Lee and Bob Woodruff talk about his battle with Acinetobacter Baumannii on Larry King Live CNN KING: Did you ever think, Lee, that Bob might be gone? L. WOODRUFF: Yes, I did. I did. It was touch and go when they first had him in surgery. And then a second nightmare occurred which happens to a lot of the soldiers, sepsis and pneumonia because he was in such a -- his body was in such an embattled state and there say bacteria that soldiers are bringing back from Iraqi soil. The Acinetobacter bacterium. And it is so advanced and so unknown here that they have actually had to pull out antibiotics from World War II to fight it, it is such a tough strain. And Bob had every kind of antibiotic his body and they told me if he did survive, he would probably have organ damage from the strength of them. |
| Staff at Walter Reed Says: We Are Drowning in War Max Cleland on Situation Room |
| "It Is Just Not Walter Reed" By Anne Hull and Dana Priest "The VA hospitals are not good either except for the staff who work so hard. It brings tears to my eyes when I see my brothers and sisters having to deal with these conditions." |
| Yes Virginia, it's true, you can't believe everything you hear on CNN! This was a real FOXY move. May 8 between 7 and 8 pm on the Situation Room CNN's Barbara Starr did a remarkably biased interview on Mystery Infections by the Pentagon. Nearly every statement made by the Pentagon is untrue. On the morning of May 9 between 8 and 9am the propaganda continues Mystery Infections For the transcripts |
| LINKS Acinetobacter Baumannii epiNEWSwire Defense Base Act Insurance Issues Before risking life and limb working for a contractor in Iraq find out just how much, or more importantly, just how little your life or limb are worth. www. dbacomp .com Sister Site American Contractors in Iraq Number One by the State Department Nam Guardian Angel Iraq Contractors Raw Data from CENTCOM End Hospital Secrecy and Save Lives Morgellon's Merlin's Miracles |

Mapping the spread of Acinetobacter baumannii from the military medical system to our community hospitals |
Military Stifles Web- based Health Records System Friendly Medical Malpractice Plus, I had a bad infection goin', which is, they say, is common to most of the guys that are getting injured in Iraq," Reed said. Still, his doctors wanted him to leave the hospital to reduce the chances of his getting another infection The War — and the War on Disease Health officials are bracing as Iraq veterans bring home stronger new diseases. Specifically, these soldiers have been infected with bacteria known as Acinetobacter baumannii |
| Featured Story by Steve Silberman Contributing Editor Wired Magazine The Invisible Enemy in Iraq In the open source world of bacteria, everyone is working for the resistance. Ramping up the immunity of any single organism, while dramatically increasing the size of the population most susceptible to infection, only helps the enemy. To an aspiring superbug, war is anything but hell. Field Hospitals the source of XDR Acinetobacter baumannii infections in US Soldiers Bethesda Naval Hospital withholds polymicrobial infection rates @ Epinewswire Investigative Public Health Journalism Not to be an alarmist about it, but there's a super germ right here in the U.S.A. that is hard to diagnosis and even harder to treat and, oh yeah, it's killing people" Jon Carroll on Ab from Iraq read here San Francisco Chronicle |

| Acinetobacter baumannii bacteria from Iraq is no MYSTERY Why did the Pentagon and the Centers for Disease Control refuse to discuss this public health threat publicly for four years? Iraqibacter A relatively benign bug becomes a highly lethal pathogen, known to U.S. soldiers as Iraqibacter. Watch the segment done by Nova Science aired on PBS July 9, 2008 here but please note that they start the story out by implying that Acinetobacter baumannii is being picked up on the streets in Iraq. If they had as much as read the story to our left here they would know the truth. Acinetobacter baumannii in Iraq The empowerment and nosocomial spread of Acinetobacter baumannii strains via the military evacuation chain from Iraq Report Cases of Ab here View our Casualty page View map and list of infected civilian hospitals here Send us your questions Soldier Finally Returns Jeff Srisourath "Once, when stitches broke, the heel got so badly infected that it took five months to heal. (These stitches probably broke because of the infection) Then his body rejected the pins (?) placed inside the foot, and he was hospitalized another four months to treat a new infection." June 30th Brownsville Texas Acinetobacter baumannii patient dies June 8 How much impact have neurotoxic drugs used in high doses to treat Acinetobacter baumannii had on the healing and recovery of TBI Traumatic Brain Injury ? June 05, 2008 Byrd released from hospital, recovering from infection June 2, 2008 8:30 pm Senator Byrd hospitalized again with fever Is he still suffering from infection he picked up at Walter Reed Army Medical Center? May 28, 2008 Fresno's Saint Agnes Medical Center suspends heart surgeries This isn't the first time the hospital has had a problem with infections. Last fall, the state and the Centers for Disease Control investigated a higher than normal number of infections after surgery. Injured US Troops Battle Drug Resistant Bacteria NPR Weekend Edition Sunday May 11 story and audio here Note: Wortmann claims that they don't know where the Acinetobacter baumannii came from. While that is less than the whole truth what is important is how they empowered it and where they spread it !! These strains of Acinetobacter baumannii could have been contained. If they can pay to send these soldiers into war they should be paying for adequate staffing, supplying, and the best medical care possible. Too few are working with too little. . Marine Sgt. David Emery, shown with his daughter, Carlee, was injured in an explosion in Iraq. The highly drug-resistant bacteria Acinetobacter baumannii complicated his recovery. Hospital bug killed 18 Doce de Octubre patients Bosses at the 12 de Octubre Hospital in Madrid have admitted that the deaths of 18 out of 252 patients infected by the Acinetobacter Baumannii bacteria since February 2006 were as a direct result. In total, 101 of the 252 affected patients have since died, and, in the majority cases, the infection was found to have been a contributory factor. The outbreak of the multi-drug resistant bacteria has taken twenty months to contain and has forced the demolition of the old intensive care unit, from where it had proven impossible to eradicate read story here Deadly bacteria kills 18 at major Madrid Hospital Drug resistant bacteria kills 18 in Spanish Hospital Southern Australian man struck by Superbug Alan Fehlberg, 65, picked up the bacterial infection, which is extremely rare in South Australia, while on holiday in Egypt. He is fighting for his life in Flinders Medical Centre after spending the past three months in intensive care units in Cairo, Paris and Singapore. Brownsville Texas 19 people tested positive for Acinetobacter baumannii at Valley Baptist Medical Center McAllen, Alamo, Weslaco, Harlingen, San Benito Both of these stories are full of misinformation This is what we're up against and people are dying because of it read story and watch video here here's another one with video Updated April 16, 2008 Senator Robert Byrd Senator Robert Byrd, the senior senator from West Virginia, fell in February and went to Walter Reed Army Medical Center where he picked up an "infection" that he has been hospitalized again for. Now that this infection, and more likely the drugs used to treat it, has deteriorated his health he is being deemed unfit to preside over the War Bill hearing. Is Senator Byrd another uncounted casualty of the Iraq War? It's " NO BIG DEAL " this happens here all the time !! Staff at Milwaukee Wisconsin VA Hospital tell family members not to worry it's no big deal that their loved one has Acinetobacter buamannii pnuemonia, sepsis, that his kidneys have shut down, that the antibiotics aren't working, and that Infectious Disease Protocal was not being followed until just a few days ago. Soldiers blamed for deadly superbug by Michele Paduana the BBC Eight patients died from a superbug after a new strain was introduced to a hospital where soldiers injured in Iraq are treated, a freedom of information request by the BBC has revealed. story and video here Pandemic fear over resistant superbug Doctors have warned that if a superbug which is known to be even more resistant to antibiotics than clostridium difficile and MRSA takes hold in hospitals, the country could face a pandemic. The acinetobacter bug is being treated with older antibiotics because newer ones do not work. There are fears that injured soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan have passed the infection on in civilian hospitals. Prof Matthew Falagas, an expert in hospital-acquired infections, said: "In some cases, we have simply run out of treatments and we could be facing a pandemic with public health What is Acinetobacter baumannii ? Frequently Asked Questions April 11, 2008 Sgt Merlin German Though he died unexpectedly after a surgery last week, the indomitable spirit of Sgt. Merlin German lives on at Brooke Army Medical Center, friends and family members said during a touching tribute to the Marine called the "Miracle Man." Burn patient Merlin German with Lt. Gen. James F. Amos during a promotion ceremony last May at BAMC. The cause of the sergeant's death was pending the return of autopsy results. Please visit Merlins Miracles for more on Merlin and his plans to help children who were burn victims www.merlinsmiracles.com March 21,2008 Collins soldier loses rest of one leg due to infection An infection in the remaining portion of Army Sgt. James T. Hackemer’s left leg prompted doctors to remove the rest of the limb up to his hip, family members said Thursday. “It was really a touch-and-go situation. We were told that they were removing the rest of his leg because the infection was spreading to the rest of his body, and it was affecting his brain waves,” said John Hackemer Jr., the father of the Town of Collins service member. March 14, 2008 Staff Sgt. Collin Bowen dies after emergency surgery for infection at BAMC February 25, 2008 US Army Spc Kevin Mowl dies at NNMC after fighting infection for seven months read more here Completely Drug Resistant Acinetobacter baumannii A forty nine year old woman dies in Louisianna hospital from Ab which was tested for susceptibility to every antibiotic available go to list of infected hospitals More on Palo Alto Palo Alto VA Still Infecting "to all parents who want their children to get better - don't take them to Palo Alto." She says the worst was when doctors and nurses ignored her for days after she discovered swelling on Brandon's head. "I said 'did you look at the site that was swollen?' he said 'yes I did.' I said 'then how on earth could you not notice that his skull has opened and pus is coming from it?'" An infection had penetrated Brandon's skull. Emergency surgery removed the infection along with part of Brandon's skull. As soon as she could, Blake transfered her son to Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. Dutch military battling new enemy Soldiers in action against resistant bacteria AD reports that "there is a similar intensive care unit at the Dutch military camp in Afghanistan". "So we've got the experience to get everything set up quickly," adds one of the soldiers with a wink. Acinetobacter baumannii reported in Dearborn Michigan Navy Hospital Malpractice Suit is Settled for $750,000 Woman died in 2005 from blood infection story here Seven reported cases of Acinetobacter baumannii at University of Maryland Medical Center, three dead story here Ongoing Problems at Walter Reed outbreaks of infectious bacteria, including extremely dangerous drug- resistant forms of Acinetobacter baumannii, a bacterium that has been ravaging injured soldiers in Iraq and in domestic military hospitals. The infection problems caused other units within the hospital to lose faith in the ICU's ability to care for surgical patients. Because of the infections, "the kidney transplant team will not recover their patients in the surgical ICU anymore," Connor said in the interview. video and interview with Doug Conner by Matt Renner Truthout Health Officials warn hospitals of Afghan Bug Threat posed by highly resistant bacteria underlines lack of preparedness Insurgents in the Bloodstream by Chas Henry A three part video on Acinetobacter baumannii in the military evacuation system watch story here Palo Alto VA Polytrauma Center Sends infected patients to private hospital in Seattle read story here Acinetobacter baumannii from Housefly's Updated October 15, 2007 Bethesda Navy Hospital withholds polymicrobial infection rates Attorney Scott Hodes and epiNewswire have filed an administrative appeal of Bethesda Naval Hospital’s refusal to release documents detailing the incidence of drug-resistant polymicrobial infections--the simultaneous infection of patients with two or more species read here Tampa VA Re-infects Wounds read here Salt Lake City VA infects read here Canadian Soldiers get Acinetobacter baumannii in Field Hospitals in Kandahar Afghanistan? read here Updated August 28, 2007 Nick Narron died today at Jewish Hospital in Louisville KY May he find Peace Featured Story by Paul Moses WLKY Louisville KY SUPERGERMS Story and Video Here “Do consumers, people who are going to the hospital, have a way of knowing if they're going to a clean hospital or a dirty hospital?” Infection Control Advisor Dr. Bill Templeton said. “They really don't.” Templeton advises several local healthcare facilities on infection control and he said hospitals aren’t required to share infection statistics with the public. The Health Department doesn’t track it either. In fact, reporting is voluntary – even though bacteria like Acinetobactor baumannii can be transmitted from countertops, curtains and other mundane surfaces on which it can live. Coming Soon to a Hospital Near You! As early as April of 2003 casualties of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars were testing positive for Multi Drug Resistant Acinetobacter baumannii at Landstuhl, Walter Reed, the hospital ship comfort. Though this bug was a hospital acquired infection it was claimed that the bacteria was from the soil in Iraq. The DoD put more effort into covering this problem up than they did into containing it. Standard protocal for infectious diseases was not followed anywhere along the military chain or at the private hospitals. These specific strains of Acinetobacter baumannii have grown resistant to every available antimicrobial and have spread throughout the military health system to include the VA health system. Acinetobacter baumanni has spread to civilian hospitals all over the US, the UK, Australia, and other countries where wounded soldiers and contractors have visited a field hospital in Iraq or Landstuhl in Germany. Soldiers and contractors have lost lives and limbs needlessly to this bacteria. Innocent civilians are losing their lives to this in military and civilian hospitals. Staff members in military and civilian hospitals are being infected with this. The MSM Media continues to ignore this deadly problem. How many more lives and limbs need to be lost before the public is warned and the hospitals are forced to clean up and follow infectious disease control protocal? How much longer will soldiers and their families be told their deadly infections were caused by the soil in Iraq or animal waste put on bombs? It's time for the truth. Every member of Congress was delivered a copy of The Invisible Enemy in Iraq when it was published in the February issue of Wired Magazine. Call or write them and ask them why they refuse to do anything about this. They do know about it. Contact Your Elected Officials Questions about Acinetobacter baumannii, Leishmaniasis, or this website Contact Marcie Hascall Clark 321 779 6799 |





