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Infection closes unit at hospital Infection closes unit at hospital
(about 1 hour later)
The Intensive Care Unit at Belfast City Hospital has been closed to new admissions after two patients were found to have a bacterial infection.The Intensive Care Unit at Belfast City Hospital has been closed to new admissions after two patients were found to have a bacterial infection.
They are now being treated in isolation. The hospital said the patients had a multi-resistant acinetobacter infection. They are now being treated in isolation in other wards. Emergency patients are being cared for in the hospital's High Dependency Unit.
Emergency patients are being cared for in the hospital's High Dependency Unit. The unit plans to re-open within the next day.
The unit plans to re-open, under guidance from the hospital's Infection Control team, within the next day. Dr Ann Loughrey, consultant medical microbiologist at the hospital, said a deep clean of the unit was under way.
In a statement the hospital said: "Acinetobacters are environmental bacteria that are present both in and outside healthcare premises. "This is a very quiet time of the year for us and we took this opportunity to give the intensive care unit an intensive clean, which actually we find little time and opportunity to do when it is run to capacity," she said.
"They are among the many organisms which can affect vulnerable patients in intensive care units." "Normal cleaning takes place on a regular basis."
She said she could not remember the last time the unit had been closed for specialist cleaning in the recent past.
Dr Loughrey said an investigation would take place to establish how the patients contracted what the hospital described as a "multi-resistant acinetobacter infection".
The hospital said the bacteria were present both in and outside healthcare premises and "among the many organisms which can affect vulnerable patients in intensive care units".