Sepsis affects 1.7 million people and kills about 270,000 per year in the U.S., a number higher than the annual death toll for opioid overdoses, breast cancer and prostate cancer combined. Still, U.S. adults consistently underestimate the risks of sepsis, according to the survey, and sepsis awareness falls behind awareness of other conditions.
Radius Global Market Research conducted the survey among over 2,000 U.S. adults from June to July 2019, on the Sepsis Alliance’s behalf. They found 22 percent of adults had never heard of sepsis, compared to just 1 percent for diabetes and stroke. Over a third of adults say they do not know the symptoms of sepsis, whereas over half can identify the three symptoms of stroke.
Sepsis awareness also differs by race and income. Non-Hispanic whites are more likely to have heard of sepsis than blacks or Hispanics. People are also more likely to know the term when they have annual incomes of $75,000 or higher.
More articles on clinical leadership and infection control:
Gates Foundation donates $12M to universal flu vaccine research
DC will not meet goal to cut 2020 HIV diagnoses by half
Nurse research prompts care improvements at Providence St. Joseph Health