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57 S.C. hospitals receive Zero Harm Awards

Staff Report //September 26, 2019//

57 S.C. hospitals receive Zero Harm Awards

Staff Report //September 26, 2019//

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A record 57 hospitals in South Carolina have received 230 Certified Zero Harm Awards, presented through a collaboration between the South Carolina Hospital Association and the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control.

The awards collectively represent 148,173 central line infection-free days and 19,771 surgical procedures with no medically caused harm, according to a news release from the hospital association. Those numbers translated into 1,047,054 days of patient safety.

To be recognized, hospitals must experience no preventable hospital-acquired infections during an extended period of time. DHEC independently verifies the hospitals’ reports.

The Zero Harm program began in 2014 to recognize hospitals that make intensive efforts to prevent medical errors and is part of the hospital association’s efforts to support S.C. hospitals as they adopt best practices such as surgical safety checklists and initiatives to improve birth and surgical outcomes.

“As medical errors continue to be a major concern across the country, South Carolina is a national leader in eliminating harm and improving patient safety,” DHEC director Rick Toomey said.

Midlands-area hospitals receiving Zero Harm honors are: Columbia V.A. Health Care System, KershawHealth, Lexington Medical Center, McLeod Health (Clarendon), Newberry County Memorial Hospital, Prisma Health (Baptist, Parkridge, Richland, Toumey) Providence Health Northeast, and Regional Medical Center. 

The statewide list can be seen here.

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