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Routine Notice Added Final

Alabama Hospitals Improve Quality by Reducing Healthcare Infections

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Published March 3rd, 2026
Detected March 17th, 2026
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Summary

Alabama's Department of Public Health and the Alabama Hospital Association have released their annual report on healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) for 2024. The report indicates that Alabama hospitals performed better than the national average in three of four key infection categories, continuing a trend of quality improvement.

What changed

The Alabama Department of Public Health (ADPH) and the Alabama Hospital Association have published their annual report detailing healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) for calendar year 2024. The report highlights that Alabama hospitals outperformed national benchmarks in three of four measured categories: catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs), central line-associated blood stream infections (CLABSIs), and surgical site infections for colon surgeries. Performance was similar to the national average for abdominal hysterectomy surgical site infections. This notice serves as an informational update on the ongoing efforts to improve patient safety and reduce infections within the state's healthcare facilities.

This is an informational notice regarding the publication of the latest HAI report. While it highlights positive trends and ongoing quality improvement initiatives, it does not introduce new regulatory requirements or compliance deadlines for healthcare providers. The ADPH and the Alabama Hospital Association continue to work with hospitals on data accuracy, education, and best practices for infection prevention. Regulated entities should note this as an update on public health performance metrics and a resource for understanding infection rates in Alabama hospitals.

Source document (simplified)

News Releases Events Health

Alabama’s hospitals continue to improve quality by reducing healthcare-associated infections

  • Newsroom
  • March 3, 2026 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Katherine Draper, ADPH, (334) 206-9445
Rachel Bunning, Alabama Hospital Association, 334-260-7612

For the fourteenth year in a row, Alabama’s Healthcare-associated Infections (HAI) program has been committed to protecting patients from adverse healthcare events, while promoting safety, quality and value in Alabama’s healthcare delivery.

“We publish an annual report that provides information on the number of infections per category and whether the hospital performs better than the national average, similar to it, or worse than,” said State Health Officer Dr. Scott Harris. “In addition to the report, our staff members work with hospitals to improve the accuracy of the reporting, education that not only helps with public reporting, but more importantly helps hospitals collect data that is valuable in their efforts to improve care.”

Alabama’s hospitals performed better than the national performance level in three of the four important infection-related categories, according to the latest report by the Alabama Department of Public Health, which is for calendar year 2024.  The annual report reveals state- and hospital-specific infection rates on catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs), central line-associated blood stream infections (CLABSIs), and two surgical site infection measures (abdominal hysterectomies and colon surgeries).  Statewide, Alabama’s hospitals performed better than the national performance level in the CAUTI, CLABSI, and colon surgery categories, while performing similarly in the abdominal hysterectomy category.

“Providing quality care and patient safety remain at the heart of everything Alabama’s hospitals do,” said Danne Howard, President of the Alabama Hospital Association. “These results reflect the dedication of frontline caregivers and hospital leaders, as well as the ongoing work of the Association’s quality and infection prevention efforts that provide education, hands-on training through infection prevention bootcamps, sharing of best practices, and direct support to hospitals across the state. By working together and continually investing in improvement, our hospitals are advancing safer quality care for the patients and communities they serve.”

Dr. Harris stresses the importance of infection prevention, as delays in recovery and the worsening of the condition caused by infections can lead to a higher economic burden.  Several studies report that a simple and straightforward process, taking only a few seconds to clean hands with an alcohol-based hand rub helps to prevent HAIs and save lives, reduce morbidity, and minimize healthcare costs.

The annual report is one of several tools patients can use to learn more about a hospital’s quality of care. Other measures are reported on Hospital Compare, a website operated by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “While these online resources can be helpful, they are just part of the picture,” added Dr. Harris. “Individuals should always talk with their healthcare provider about the care needed and the best place to receive that care.”

To view the report, visit the ADPH Healthcare Associated Infections.

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3/3/26

County health departments throughout Alabama provide a wide range of confidential and professional services. Contact your local county health department for additional information.

Mission: To promote, protect, and improve Alabama’s health

Vision: Healthy People. Healthy Communities. Healthy Alabama.

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State Health
Published
March 3rd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers
Geographic scope
State (Alabama)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Public Health Infection Control

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