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Transcript
Infection Control
DR. MAZIN BARRY, MD, FRCPC, FACP, DTM&H
Infectious Disease Consultant
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Outline
•
•
•
•
Hospital Acquired Infections (HAI)
Hand Hygiene (HH)
Isolation Precautions
Injection Practices and vaccinations
HAI
• At any time, over 1.4 million people worldwide are
suffering from infections acquired in hospital
• Between 5% and d10% of patients admitted to hospitals
acquire one or more infections
• Causes more serious illness
• Prolong hospital stay
• Long-term disability
• High additional financial burden
• High personal burden on patients and their families
• Deaths
Most frequent sites of infection
and their risk factors
URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS
Urinary catheter
Urinary invasive procedures
Advanced age
Severe underlying disease
Urolitiasis
Pregnancy
Diabetes
SURGICAL SITE INFECTIONS
Inadequate antibiotic prophylaxis
Incorrect surgical skin preparation
Inappropriate wound care
Surgical intervention duration
Type of wound
Poor surgical asepsis
Diabetes
Nutritional state
Immunodeficiency
Lack of training and supervision
34%
13%
Most common
LACK
OF
sites of health careassociated
infection
HAND
and the risk factors
HYGIEN
underlying
the
occurrence
E of
infections
LOWER RESPIRATORY TRACT INFECTIONS
Mechanical ventilation
Aspiration
Nasogastric tube
Central nervous system depressants
Antibiotics and anti-acids
Prolonged health-care facilities stay
Malnutrition
Advanced age
Surgery
Immunodeficiency
BLOOD INFECTIONS
Vascular catheter
Neonatal age
Critical care
Severe underlying disease
Neutropenia
Immunodeficiency
New invasive technologies
Lack of training and supervision
17%
14%
Prevention of HAI
• Validated and standardized prevention
strategies have been shown to reduce HAI
• At least 50% HAI could be prevented
• Most solutions are simple and not resourcedemanding and can be implemented
Colonization Versus Infection
• People who carry bacteria without evidence of
infection (fever, increased WBC) are colonized
• If an infection develops, it is usually from
bacteria that colonize patients
• Bacteria that colonize patients can be
transmitted form one patient to another by
hands of healthcare workers
Bacteria can be transmitted even if the patient
is not infected.
The Iceberg Effect
Infected
Colonized
The inanimate environment
can facilitate transmission
Hand transmission
• Hands are the most
common vehicle to
transmit healthcare
associated pathogens
• Transmission of
healthcare associated
pathogens from one
patient to another via
healthcare worker’s
hands
Why should you clean your hands
• Any HCW involved in health care needs to be concerned
about hand hygiene
• Their hand hygiene concerns you !
• You must perform hand hygiene to :
- protect the patient against harmful microbes in your
hands or present on your skin
- protect yourself and the healthcare environment from
harmful microbes
FIVE MOMENTS OF HAND HYGIENE
5 Moments of Hand hygiene
How to clean your hands
• Handrubbing with alcohol-based handrub is the
preferred routine method of hand hygiene if
hands are not visibly soiled
• Handwashing with soap and water – essential
when hands are visibly dirty or visibly soiled
(following exposure to body fluids)
Hand hygiene and glove use
• The use of gloves does not replace the need to
clean the hands
• Remove gloves to perform ahnd hygiene, when an
indication occurs while wearing gloves
• Wear gloves only when indicated, otherwise they
become a major risk for germ transmission
Compliance with Hand hygiene
• Compliance with hand hygiene differs
across facilities and countries
• Main reasons for non-compliance
reported by HCWs
- Too busy
- Skin irritation
- Glove use
- Don’t think about it
Hand hygiene improvement strategy
• System change
- Access to safe, continuous supply of water, soap,
towels, alcohol based hand rub at the point of care
• Training / Education
- Regular training to all HCW
• Evaluation and feedback
- Monitoring hand hygiene practices, perceptions and
knowledge, while providing results feedback to HCWs
• Reminders in the workplace
- Reminding HCWs
• Safety culture
- Creating an environment that facilitates awareness,
raising about patient safety issues
ISOLATION PRECAUTIONS
Mode of transmission
• A microorganism may be spread by a single or multiple
routes.
– Contact, direct or indirect
– Droplet
– Airborne
– Vector-borne (usually arthropod) and
– Common environmental sources or vehicles includes food-borne and waterborne, medications
e.g., contaminated IV fluids
19
Types of Isolation Precautions
• Standard precautions
• Transmission-based precautions
– Contact precautions
– Airborne precautions
– Droplet precautions
20
Definition of standard
precautions
• Apply to all patients receiving care in hospitals regardless
of their diagnosis or presumed infection status.
•
Apply to (1) blood; (2) all body fluids, secretions, and
excretions except sweat, regardless of whether or not
they contain blood; (3) nonintact skin; and (4) mucous
membranes.
21
Standard Precaution - Hand hygiene
Handwashing with either plain or antiseptic
containing soap and water, and use of alcoholbased
products (gels, rinses, foams) that do not requre
the
use of water
Perform hand hygiene:
– Before and after patient contact
– After removing gloves or any other PPE
item
– After touching blood, body fluids, secretions,
excretions, and contaminated items,
whether or not gloves are worn
Standard precautions
Personal protective equipment
(PPE)
• The selection of PPE based on
– The nature of patient interaction and/or
– The likely mode(s) of transmission
• Designated containers for used disposable
or reusable PPE should be placed in a
convenient to the site of removal
• Hand hygiene is always the final step after
removing and disposing of PPE
23
Standard precautions – Gloves (PPE)
1.
3.
Exposure to blood, body fluids,
secretions, excretions, mucous
membranes and non-intact skin,
and contaminated items
Perform hand hygiene
immediately after glove
removal
2. Change gloves when heavily
contaminated
4. Disposable glove should not be
reused
24
Standard precautions – Gown (PPE)
1. When splashes or
sprays of blood and
body fluids, secretions
and excretions to skin
and working clothes
are likely
2. When working clothes
has substantial
contact with patient,
environmental
surfaces or patient
items
3. Select an appropriate gown for the procedure
25
Standard precautions – Mask and eye protection (PPE)
Surgical masks and eye protection:
–
–
–
When splashes or sprays of blood
and body fluid, secretions and excretions
are likely
Sterile technique
Respiratory etiquette
Change PPE promptly if heavily
contaminated during the procedure
26
Standard precautions - prevent
hcws exposure to bloodborne
pathogens
• Prevent needles and other sharps
instrument injuries
• Prevent mucous membrane exposures
• Safe work practices and PPE to protect
mucous membranes and non-intact skin
27
Standard precautions: Environmental measures
 Clean and disinfect non-critical surfaces in patient-care
areas are part of SP.
 Clean and disinfect all frequently touched surfaces in
patient-care areas
 FDA-registered disinfectants or detergents
28
Respiratory hygiene and cough etiquette
 Three elements include:
Educate healthcare workers, patients, and visitors
Post signs in appropriate language(s)
Source control measures:
Cover the nose/mouth when coughing or
sneezing
Use tissue paper respiratory secretions and
dispose in the waste receptacle
Perform hand hygiene after contact with
respiratory secretions and contaminated objects
Place a surgical mask on the coughing person
when tolerated and appropriate
Spatial separation, ideally >3 feet
29
TRANSMISSION-BASED
PRECAUTIONS Management of visitors
• Visitors as sources of healthcare
associated infections – e.g., pertussis,
influenza, tuberculosis
– Cough etiquette
• Use of barrier precautions by visitors
– Educate patients and family members
– Follow signs for isolation precautions
30
TRANSMISSION-BASED PRECAUTIONS Contact Precautions
• Infections spread by direct or indirect contact with
patients or patient-care environment –C. difficle, MRSA,
VRE, ESBL and MDR GNR
• Limit patient movement
• Private/SINGLE room or cohort with patients with same
infection
• Wear disposable gown and gloves when entering the
patient room
• Remove and discard used disposable gown and gloves
inside the patient room
• Wash hands immediately after leaving the patient room
• Clean patient room daily using a hospital disinfectant,
with attention to frequently touched surfaces (bed rails,
bedside tables, lavatory surfaces, blood pressure cuff,
equipment surfaces)
• Use dedicated equipment if possible (e.g., stethoscope) 31
Contact precautions signs
32
Droplet Precautions
 Reduce the risk of transmission by large particle
droplets (larger than 5 m in size).
 Requires close contact between the source person and
the recipient
 Droplets usually travel 3 feet or less
 E.g., influenza including H1N1, other respiratory
viruses, rubella, parvovirus B19, mumps, H.
influenzae, and N. meningitidis
33
Droplet Precautions cont.
• A private/single room or
• Cohort with patient with active infection with same
microorganism
• Use a mask when entering the room and definitely if
within 3 feet of patient
• Limit movement and transport of the patient. Use a mask
on the patient if they need to be moved and follow
respiratory hygiene/cough etiquette
• Keep at least 3 feet between infected patient and visitors
34
Droplet precautions signs
35
Airborne Precautions
 Tuberculosis, measles, varicella, MERS-CoV
 Place the patient in an airborne infection isolation room (AIIR)
 Pressure should be monitored with visible indicator
 Use of respiratory protection (e.g., fit tested N95 respirator) or
powered air-purifying respirator (PAPR) when entering the
room
 Limit movement and transport of the patient. Use a mask on
the patient if they need to be moved
 Keep patient room door closed.
36
Airborne precautions signs
37
Safe injection practices
• Large outbreaks of HBV and HCV among
patients in the United States
• The primary breaches
– Reinsertion of used needles into a multipledose vial or solution container (e.g., saline
bag)
– Use of a single needle/syringe to administer
intravenous medication to multiple patients.
38
Vaccination
• Annual Influenza vaccine
• HBSAB
• VZV