Wednesday, April 25, 2007

DVT Support Socks could replace drugs as lifeline for 1m hospital patients


DVT Support Socks could replace drugs as lifeline for 1m hospital patients

Up to a million hospital patients at risk of deadly blood clots will be given stockings to wear in bed, rather than drugs, according to Health Service guidelines.

At least 25,000 patients die every year - 25 times the number killed by the suberbug MRSA - after suffering deep vein thrombosis following a hospital operation.

Last week a highly critical report from MPs warned that the NHS was systematically underestimating the threat, leading to 500 unnecessary deaths a week.

They demanded urgent measures to combat blood-clotting, which costs the NHS £640million a year despite preventative drugs costing just £1 a day.

But new guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, being sent to all hospitals in England and Wales, say only patients aged 60 and over should be routinely considered for bloodthinning drugs.

Up to a million patients aged between 40 and 60 will instead be given compression stockings to wear in hospital, and possibly inflatable "boots" during an operation to encourage blood flow to the legs.

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