Vancouver Coastal Health鈥檚 four-legged infection fighter made a road-trip to 91大黄鸭 on Monday to showcase his C. difficile detection abilities.
Angus, a three-year-old English springer spaniel displayed his talents Monday in the lecture theatre at 91大黄鸭 General Hospital鈥檚 clinic academic campus, finding a piece of scented gauze with C. difficile spore odour hidden under a chair by his trainer Teresa Zurberg.
Angus uses his ultra-sensitive detection device鈥攈is nose鈥攖o seek out C. difficile spores in the hospital environment. Angus will search common and clinical areas and patient units when patients are not present.
鈥淲e鈥檙e excited about the opportunity to share our knowledge and expertise with our health care colleagues across the province,鈥 said Teresa Zurberg.
鈥淪ince Angus started working at Vancouver General Hospital in 2016, we have learned a tremendous amount about the presence and eradication of C. difficile in health care settings.鈥
Angus is trained to detect Clostridium difficile or C. difficile, a superbug that attacks people whose immune systems have been weakened by antibiotics.
He and a second dog鈥擠odger鈥攁re part of an infection prevention team that includes an infection control practitioner and housekeeping staff, all dedicated to reducing environmental contamination of C. difficile.
This results in a reduction in the transmission of C. difficile by health care workers, visitors and patients, and, in turn, a decrease in the C. difficile infection rate. The good news鈥攊t鈥檚 working. The nose clearly knows where to find bacteria.
Vancouver Coastal Health has recorded a significant decrease in the number of hospital acquired C. difficile cases since Angus began sniffing out C. difficile infection at Vancouver General Hospital.
鈥淚 know how serious C. difficile can be because I nearly died from it,鈥 said Zurberg. 鈥淭o know that Angus, and now Dodger, are playing a key role in preventing other people from contracting this potentially life-altering infection is very rewarding.鈥
Finding reservoirs of C. difficile is crucial to eradicating the superbug. Once the bacterium is detected by Angus or Dodger at VGH, the area or patient room is cleaned, often with a state-of-the-art ultraviolet-C light disinfecting robot that removes 99.9 per cent of the spores.
VGH has three light disinfecting robots, known as 鈥淩-D鈥 (Rapid Disinfector).
Since the dogs were let out of the doghouse and into the hospital, VGH has become better at targeting the disinfection to where it is needed the most.
鈥淚n the Intensive Care Unit, we work hard to prevent the spread of infection by isolating patients, washing our hands and working with environmental services to keep the unit clean,鈥 said Jackson Lam, VGH patient services manager.
鈥淗aving Angus come through the ICU is an innovative and exciting way to discover new places that C. difficile might be lingering on surfaces. That way we can immediately target cleaning and disinfection.鈥
Vancouver Coastal Health has implemented a number of measures to combat the spread of antibiotic-resistant organisms and has won national and international awards for this innovative work.
It was the first health authority in Canada to utilize ultraviolet light to supplement the disinfection process and the first to tag and barcode clean equipment to ensure routine inspections and maintenance are performed. Vancouver Coastal Health also participates in voluntary as well as mandatory provincial surveillance programs.
There is a downside, however, to having to having two trained C. difficile detection dogs at VGH. 鈥淓veryone wants to pet Angus,鈥 said Lam. 鈥淲e have to respect that he is a working dog and not touch him, as handsome a dog as he is.鈥
To report a typo, email: edit@kelownacapnews.com.
<>
barry.gerding@blackpress.ca
Like us on and follow us on .