Val
Member
After I got out of the ICU I was moved to a private room in the hospital. My room was marked as an "isolation room". This is a room built for protecting the hospital from patients that have infectious diseases mainly TB. The problem with such a room is that it is kept at a lower pressure than the rest of the hospital, meaning that when the door of the room is opened it sucks air. I requested and received a different room though the hospital staff could not understand why. This is a problem in hospitals across the nation, they use isolation rooms as regular rooms.
This is how to recognize a isolation room, beside the posted sign. There will be a tube over the door of the room containing a ball. When the door is closed the ball will come into the room side of the tube, showing that the room is operating at negative pressure. If you are placed in such a room, you should request another room. Until you are transferred from the room, keep the door shut. This will help some, but most door are not well sealed.
I only know about this because my husband was involved in a study regarding the misuse of isolation rooms. This happens in hospitals across the country and this is a dangerous room to stay in.
Val
This is how to recognize a isolation room, beside the posted sign. There will be a tube over the door of the room containing a ball. When the door is closed the ball will come into the room side of the tube, showing that the room is operating at negative pressure. If you are placed in such a room, you should request another room. Until you are transferred from the room, keep the door shut. This will help some, but most door are not well sealed.
I only know about this because my husband was involved in a study regarding the misuse of isolation rooms. This happens in hospitals across the country and this is a dangerous room to stay in.
Val