The Daily Reckoning
Daily Reckoning USAHome  |  SUBSCRIBE  |  Archives  |  RSS  |  FREE Resources  |  Discussion Board  |  Cast of Characters  |  ContactThe Daily Reckoning is GLOBAL!

Sign Up for The Daily Reckoning FREE!

Superbugs


"The fundamental problem is sterility. Despite all of the precautions taken in hospital environments, the reality is that trillions of disease organisms are introduced into a typical hospital every day."


by Jonathan Kolber

It's a shocking fact: 90,000 people die in U.S. hospitals each year from infections received inside the hospital. They come to be healed, but instead are killed.

This problem is so prevalent that doctors even have a name for it: iatrogenic disease.

According to the American Iatrogenic Association (yes, it's that bad), a recent presidential task force called this a "national problem of epidemic proportions." The estimated costs associated with this are $29 billion annually.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 2 million people annually acquire infections while hospitalized - the 90,000 who die just happen to be the unluckiest of the bunch.

Let's not be too quick to blame the doctors or hospitals for this. In most cases, they're doing their best given what's been available. Pathogens such as bacteria and viruses are surprisingly difficult to control.

Medical researchers are increasingly concerned about the emergence of "superbugs" resistant to commonly used antibiotics. These are significant contributors to those hospital deaths.

The fundamental problem is sterility. Despite all of the precautions taken in hospital environments, the reality is that trillions of disease organisms are introduced into a typical hospital every day. Infected people sneeze and cough, spraying organisms into the air. Outside air carries in whatever happens to be lurking in the vicinity.

It gets even worse when surgical procedures are involved. Normally, your skin provides a barrier against infection. That's one of its primary functions, and it works in concert with your immune system to identify, isolate and destroy most pathogens before they can get a foothold.

Unfortunately, surgical procedures by their very nature open up the body's inner tissues and organs to the outside environment. It's unavoidable. The only way to prevent this would be to use "clean rooms" that go far beyond what's affordable outside NASA and the computer chip industry.

What's to be done?

Fortunately, one tiny company has the answer to safer surgical procedures - and it appears the FDA is about to grant it a whopping monopoly. This company has impressive management, healthy cash reserves, a wide array of issued patents and the perfect solution to sterilizing donated transplant tissue.

P.S. I expect explosive gains in late 2005 or 2006 as doctors and hospitals start to wake up to the fact that they have no truly safe alternative, followed by a steady rise over the next 3 -5 years as the technology is widely commercialized. Find out the entire scoop here:

Venture Capitalist-Style Returns

 

 

 

Subscribe to the Daily Reckoning

The Daily Reckoning is FREE!
Click below…

Subscribe to The Daily Reckoning
* We value your privacy!
   
…………………………………….

Subscribe to the Daily Reckoning's RSS Feed
What is RSS?

RSS XML
Add the DR to Google Homepage
Add the DR to My Yahoo
Add the DR to My MSN
Add the DR to My AOL
Bookmark the DR with Del.icious.os
Subscribe to the Mogambo RSS feed

…………………………………….
Subscribe to the Daily Reckoning

The Daily Reckoning is FREE! Click below…

Subscribe to The Daily Reckoning
* We value your privacy!
   

Visit Agora Financial's website!

    
Home  |  SUBSCRIBE  |  Whitelist Us  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy  |  Search  | SiteMap 

Copyright 2008-2009 Agora Financial LLC. All Rights Reserved.
The content of this site may not be redistributed in any way with out written consent of Agora Inc.