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Hand Hygiene and Glove Use for EMS Centers for Disease Control (CDC) World Health Organization (WHO) Standard and Expanded Isolation Precautions Standard Precautions • Previously called Universal Precautions • Assumes blood and body fluid of ANY patient could be infectious • Recommends PPE and other infection control practices to prevent transmission in any healthcare setting • Decisions about PPE use determined by type of clinical interaction with patient PPE Use in Healthcare Settings PPE for Standard Precautions • Gloves – Use when touching blood, body fluids, secretions, excretions, contaminated items; for touching mucus membranes and nonintact skin • Gowns – Use during procedures and patient care activities when contact of clothing/ exposed skin with blood/body fluids, secretions, or excretions is anticipated PPE Use in Healthcare Settings PPE for Standard Precautions • Mask and goggles or a face shield – Use during patient care activities likely to generate splashes or sprays of blood, body fluids, secretions, or excretions PPE Use in Healthcare Settings What Type of PPE Would You Wear? • Giving a bed bath? • Suctioning oral secretions? • Transporting a patient on a stretcher? • Responding to an emergency where blood is spurting? PPE Use in Healthcare Settings • Drawing blood? • Cleaning an incontinent patient with diarrhea? • Irrigating a wound? • Taking vital signs? What Type of PPE Would You Wear? • Giving a bed bath? • Generally none • Suctioning oral secretions? • Gloves and mask/goggles or a face shield – sometimes gown • Transporting a patient on a stretcher? • Generally none required • Responding to an emergency where blood is spurting? • Gloves, fluid-resistant gown, mask/goggles or a face shield • Drawing blood? • Gloves • Cleaning an incontinent patient with diarrhea? • Gloves w/wo gown • Irrigating a wound? • Gloves, gown, mask/goggles or a face shield • Taking vital signs? – Generally none Gloves Ignaz Semmelweis, 1815-1865 1840’s: General Hospital of Vienna Divided into two clinics, alternating admissions every 24 hours: – First Clinic: Doctors and medical students – Second Clinic: Midwives 16 Maternal mortality, 1842 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 First Clinic Second Clinic The Intervention: Hand scrub with chlorinated lime solution Hand hygiene basin at the Lying-In Women’s Hospital in Vienna, 1847. Hand Hygiene: Not a New Concept Maternal Mortality due to Postpartum Infection General Hospital, Vienna, Austria, 1841-1850 Semmelweis’ Hand Hygiene Intervention Maternal Mortality (%) 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 MDs 1946 1847 1848 1849 1850 Midwives ~ Hand antisepsis reduces the frequency of patient infections ~ Adapted from: Hosp Epidemiol Infect Control, 2nd Edition, 1999. Colonized or Infected: What is the Difference? People who carry bacteria without evidence of infection (fever, increased white blood cell count) are colonized If an infection develops, it is usually from bacteria that colonize patients Bacteria that colonize patients can be transmitted from one patient to another by the hands of healthcare workers ~ Bacteria can be transmitted even if the patient is not infected ~ The Iceberg Effect Infected Colonized Hand transmission – Hands are the most common vehicle to transmit health careassociated pathogens – Transmission of health careassociated pathogens from one patient to another via health-care workers’ hands requires 5 sequential steps 5 stages of hand transmission one two three four five Germs present on patient skin and immediate environment surfaces Germ transfer onto healthcare worker’s hands Germs survive on hands for several minutes Suboptimal or omitted hand cleansing results in hands remaining contaminated Contaminated hands transmit germs via direct contact with patient or patient’s immediate environment Why should you clean your hands? ■ Any health-care worker, caregiver or person involved in patient care needs to be concerned about hand hygiene ■ Therefore hand hygiene concerns you! ■ You must perform hand hygiene to: ■ protect the patient against harmful germs carried on your hands or present on his/her own skin ■ protect yourself and the health-care environment from harmful germs The “My 5 Moments for Hand Hygiene” approach 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 when hands are visibly dirty or visibly soiled (following visible exposure to body fluids)1 ■ DO NOT use antimicrobial hand soaps – these disrupt normal skin flora, increasing susceptibility to infection. 1 If exposure to spore forming organisms e.g. Clostridium difficile is strongly suspected or proven, including during outbreaks – clean hands using soap and water How to handrub To effectively reduce the growth of germs on hands, handrubbing must be performed by following all of the illustrated steps. This takes only 20–30 seconds! How to handwash To effectively reduce the growth of germs on hands, handwashing must last 40–60 secs and should be performed by following all of the illustrated steps Hand hygiene and glove use ■ The use of gloves does not replace the need to clean your hands! ■ You should remove gloves to perform hand hygiene, when an indication occurs while wearing gloves ■ You should wear gloves only when indicated – otherwise they become a major risk for germ transmission The impact of HCAI HCAI can cause: ■ more serious illness ■ prolongation of stay in a health-care facility ■ long-term disability ■ excess deaths ■ high additional financial burden ■ high personal costs on patients and their families 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 sites of healthOF careLACK associated infection HAND and the risk factors underlying the HYGIENE occurrence 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% Recovery of VRE from Hands and Environmental Surfaces Up to 41% of healthcare worker’s hands sampled (after patient care and before hand hygiene) were positive for VRE1 VRE were recovered from a number of environmental surfaces in patient rooms VRE survived on a countertop for up to 7 days2 1 Hayden MK, Clin Infect Diseases 2000;31:1058-1065. 2 Noskin G, Infect Control and Hosp Epidemi 1995;16:577-581. The Inanimate Environment Can Facilitate Transmission X represents VRE culture positive sites ~ Contaminated surfaces increase cross-transmission ~ Abstract: The Risk of Hand and Glove Contamination after Contact with a VRE (+) Patient Environment. Hayden M, ICAAC, 2001, Chicago, IL. What is the single most important reason for EMS workers to practice good hand hygiene? 1. To remove visible soiling from hands 2. To prevent transfer of bacteria from the home to the ambulance 3. To prevent transfer of bacteria from the ambulance to the home 4. To prevent infections that patients acquire in the ambulance What is the single most important reason for EMS workers to practice good hand hygiene? 1. To remove visible soiling from hands 2. To prevent transfer of bacteria from the home to the ambulance 3. To prevent transfer of bacteria from the ambulance to the home 4. To prevent infections that patients and EMS staff acquire in the ambulance How often do you clean your hands after touching a PATIENT’S INTACT SKIN (for example, when measuring a pulse or blood pressure)? 1. Always 2. Often 3. Sometimes 4. Never How often do you clean your hands after touching a PATIENT’S INTACT SKIN (for example, when measuring a pulse or blood pressure)? 1. Always 2. Often 3. Sometimes 4. Never Estimate how often YOU clean your hands after touching a patient or a contaminated surface in the ambulance? 1. 25% 2. 50% 3. 75% 4. 90% 5. 100% Which method do you use to clean your hands at work? 1. Plain soap and water 2. Antimicrobial soap and water 3. Alcohol-based handrub Which hand hygiene method is best at killing bacteria? 1. Plain soap and water 2. Antimicrobial soap and water 3. Alcohol-based handrub Which hand hygiene method is best at killing bacteria? 1. Plain soap and water 2. Antimicrobial soap and water 3. Alcohol-based handrub At least 60% alcohol concentration Which of the following hand hygiene agents is LEAST drying to your skin? 1. Plain soap and water 2. Antimicrobial soap and water 3. Alcohol-based handrub Which of the following hand hygiene agents is LEAST drying to your skin? 1. Plain soap and water 2. Antimicrobial soap and water 3. Alcohol-based handrub How often do you clean your hands after touching an ENVIRONMENTAL SURFACE near a patient (for example, a clipboard or radio)? 1. Always 2. Often 3. Sometimes 4. Never How often do you clean your hands after touching an ENVIRONMENTAL SURFACE near a patient (for example, a clipboard or radio)? 1. Always 2. Often 3. Sometimes 4. Never Use of artificial nails by healthcare workers poses no risk to patients. 1. Strongly agree 2. Agree 3. Don’t know 4. Disagree 5. Strongly disagree Use of artificial nails by healthcare workers poses no risk to patients. 1. Strongly agree 2. Agree 3. Don’t know 4. Disagree 5. Strongly disagree Can a Fashion Statement Harm the Patient? % Recovery of gram negative bacteria 40 35 30 Natural (n=31) Artificial (n=27) Polished (n=31) ARTIFICIAL 20 10 10 0 5 POLISHED NATURAL p<0.05 Edel et. al, Nursing Research 1998: 47;54-59 When do you need gloves? Whenever risk for exposure to bloodborne pathogens exists Definition of Bloodborne Pathogens Bloodborne pathogens are disease-causing microorganisms such as bacteria and viruses found in: – Blood – Body fluids containing blood Definition of Blood The term “blood” applies to: – Human blood – Components of human blood – Any product containing human blood OPIM Other potentially infectious materials (OPIM) include fluids such as those found: – In the joints – Around the heart – In the abdomen – In the chest cavity – Cerebrospinal fluid – Amniotic fluid – Any fluid or unfixed tissues containing gross visible blood No-Risk Fluids As long as there are NO visible signs of blood, no-risk fluids include: – – – – – – Sweat Tears Saliva Urine Vomit Sputum Definition of an Exposure An exposure occurs when a pathogen makes direct or indirect contact with: – Mucous membranes – Non-intact skin Minimize the Risk The best way to minimize the risk of contracting a bloodborne pathogen is to treat ALL body fluids as if they are infectious. Glove use for all patient care contacts is a useful strategy for reducing risk of transmission of organisms. 1. Strongly agree 2. Agree 3. Don’t know 4. Disagree 5. Strongly disagree Glove use for all patient care contacts is a useful strategy for reducing risk of transmission of organisms. 1. Strongly agree 2. Agree 3. Don’t know 4. Disagree 5. Strongly disagree The Glove Problem Wilson J, Lynam S, Singleton J, Loveday H. The misuse of clinical gloves: risk of cross-infection and factors influencing the decision of health care workers to wear gloves. Antimircob Resis Infect Contr. 2013; 2(Suppl 1):03 The Glove Problem • Gloves used inappropriately 42% of time Inappropriate = no risk of BBP exposure • 39% uses involved cross-contamination More likely with inappropriate use (58% vs. 28%) • 24% involved > 5 objects touched by gloved hand prior to performing procedure Wilson J, Lynam S, Singleton J, Loveday H. The misuse of clinical gloves: risk of cross-infection and factors influencing the decision of health care workers to wear gloves. Antimircob Resis Infect Contr. 2013; 2(Suppl 1):03 Gloves For people, not equipment The “My 5 Moments for Hand Hygiene” approach – includes changing gloves This presentation created in 2013 by Mike McEvoy using slide from CDC and WHO. Power Point version available at www.mikemcevoy.com.