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THE CENTRAL HOSPITAL, COLOMBO, SRI LANKA PREPARED BY: NAME: DR. DR.PHILOMENA CHANDRASIRI, SIGNATURE: STAMP: REVIEWED BY: DESIGNATION: CONSULTANT MICROBIOLGIST DATE: NAME: DR. RUWAN SENATILLEKE SIGNATURE: DESIGNATION: CHAIRPERSON, ASIRI HOSPITALS POLICY REVIEW COMMITTEE APPROVED BY: NAME: DR. MANJULA KARUNARATNE STAMP: DATE: SIGNATURE: STAMP: DESIGNATION: DEPUTY CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER JCI ACCREDITATION STANDARDS FOR HOSPITALS – 5TH EDITION SECTION III: HEALTHCARE MANAGEMENT STANDARDS CHAPTER: PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF INFECTIONS (PCI) DOCUMENT TITLE: Policies and Procedures for Barrier Precautions and Isolations DATE: REVISION NO: 0 DATE OF REVISION: NA ISSUE NO: 1 DATE OF ISSUE: 15 DECEMBER 2014 DOCUMENT IDENTIFICATION NO: CHL/HP/PCI 06 NO OF PAGES:7 STANDARDS REFERENCE: PCI.8 / PCI.8.1 CHL/HP/PCI 06 Page 1 of 7 A.PURPOSE To provide isolation and barrier precautions for patients with communicable diseases in order to protect other patients, staff and visitors. To provide isolation facilities to patients who are immunosuppressed in order to protect them from acquiring infections. B. DEFINITION Communicable Diseases- Infections that are transferable from one person to another. Contact Precautions – precautions that should be practiced when handling patients infected with diseases transmitted by contact. Respiratory Precautions- precautions that should be practiced when handling patients infected with diseases transmitted by respiratory route. Standard Precautions- A set of practices that should be practiced by all healthcare workers at all time Airborne Precautions- precautions that should be taken to prevent transmission of infectious agents that remains suspended in air for a long time (particles < 5µ) Droplet Precautions –precautions that should be taken to prevent transmission of infectious agents that are transmitted by droplet particles (> 5µ) C. SCOPE Out patients department and clinical areas including isolation rooms D. JCI RELATED STANDARD PCI 8 – The hospital provides barrier precautions and isolation procedures that protect patients, visitors, and staff from communicable diseases and protects immunosuppressed patients from acquiring infections to which they are uniquely prone PCI 8 .1– The hospital develops and implements a process to manage a sudden influx of patients with airborne infections and when negative-pressure rooms are not available CHL/HP/PCI 06 Page 2 of 7 E. RESPONSIBILITY Medical Director Nursing Director Maintenance Engineer Hospital Management Infection Control Team Chief Nursing Officer / Asst. Chief Nursing Officer Sisters In- charge Medical Officers F. POLICY 1. Our hospital policy is to provide maximum isolation & barrier precautions when handling patients with - Communicable diseases -eg SARS ,Influenza, chicken pox - Severe immunosuppression. 2. Our hospital policy is not to accept patients with communicable diseases on elective admissions basis. The hospital has designed a plan of action in case of sudden influx of patient with communicable diseases arrives for treatment. G. PROCEDURE 1. 2. Patients infected with communicable diseases that are transmitted by respiratory route and needs isolation should not be admitted to the hospital unless he/she was admitted before developing the symptoms. If such patient is taken in to the emergency unit he / she will be taken to a separate clinical room with adequate ventilation and away from other patients/visitors areas. Patient will be provided with surgical mask. Once the patient leaves the room it should be left vacant for one hour. The following infections / conditions indicate that the patient should be under air borne precautions / isolation: - Chicken Pox - Disseminated zoster ion any patient or localized zoster in immunocompremised patients - Measles (Rubella) CHL/HP/PCI 06 Page 3 of 7 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. - Extra pulmonary tuberculosis, draining lesion (including scrofula) - Pulmonary or laryngeal tuberculosis, confirmed - Pulmonary or laryngeal tuberculosis , suspected Once admitted the patient shall be isolated in an isolation room with negative pressure ventilation (12 air exchanges /hour). The expelled air should not be directed to patient/visitors area or air handling units. ( Refer Annexure 2 – Infection Control and Ventilation Requirements for PE Rooms) Once the patient is admitted the airflow direction (i.e negative pressure) will be monitored using a log sheet on a daily basis. The record shall be maintained in a retrievable format ideally near the entry to the room. After the patient vacate the room terminal cleaning is done according to the guidelines( Refer Annexure1- Checklist for Terminal Cleaning of Isolation rooms) If there is a sudden influx of patients who are suspected of having contagious diseases they shall be taken in from a dedicated entrance to a separate clinical room with hand washing facilities for examination by a medical officer wearing appropriate PPE. The patients shall be provided with a surgical mask. The staff will be educated periodically regarding management of patients with infectious diseases and proper use of personal care equipment. Regular auditing will be done on barrier precaution practices and terminal cleaning Immunosuppressed patients need to be isolated to protect them from acquiring infections. As the hospital does not having severely immunosuppressed patients who are undergoing stem cell transplants, rooms with positive pressure ventilation are not necessary. It is not an essential requirement for patients undergoing solid organ transplantation or chemotherapy. These patients are isolated in a single room. The staff should practice contact precautions and aseptic precautions. 10. Managing Patients with Suspected or Confirmed Airborne Diseases / TB Accident & Emergency Unit a) The amount of time patients with suspected or confirmed airborne infections / infectious TB disease spend in A&E should be minimized. Such patients should be promptly identified, evaluated, and separated from other patients. b) Ideally, such patients should be placed in an Airborne Infection Isolation room. c) When an AII room is not available, use a room with effective general ventilation, and use air cleaning technologies (e.g., a portable HEPA filtration system or Mobile Plasmair unit), if available, or transfer the patient to a setting or area with recommended infection control capacity. CHL/HP/PCI 06 Page 4 of 7 d) A&E should have at least one Airborne Infection Isolation room. Air-cleaning technologies (e.g., HEPA filtration) can be used to increase equivalent air changes per hour (ACH) in waiting areas. e) HCWs entering an Airborne Infection Isolation room or any room with a patient with airborne infections / infectious TB disease should wear an N95 mask. f) After a patient exits a room, allow adequate time (60 minutes) to elapse to ensure removal of infection / M. tuberculosis-contaminated room air before allowing entry by staff or another patient. g) Before a patient leaves an Airborne Infection Isolation room, perform an assessment of 1) the patient's need to discontinue airborne precautions, 2) the risk for transmission and the patient's ability to observe strict respiratory hygiene, and 3) cough etiquette procedures (see the standard precautions policy). h) Patients with suspected or confirmed airborne / infectious TB who are outside an Airborne Infection Isolation room should wear a surgical mask, if possible. Patients who cannot tolerate masks because of medical conditions should observe strict respiratory hygiene and cough etiquette procedures. 11. Environmental Controls General Ventilation: Airborne Infection Isolation (AII) rooms in of healthcare settings should be designed so that aII rooms achieve an airflow of >12 ACH. The system minimum set point must be adequate to maintain the recommended ACH and a negative pressure > - 0.01 inch of water gauge compared with adjacent areas. AII rooms should be checked for negative pressure by using visual indicators (e.g., flutter strips) regardless of the presence of differential pressure sensing devices (e.g., manometers) before occupancy, and these rooms should be checked daily when occupied by a patient with suspected or confirmed TB disease. Design, construct, and maintain general ventilation systems so that air flows from clean to less clean (more contaminated) areas. In addition, design general ventilation systems to provide optimal airflow patterns within rooms and to prevent air stagnation or shortcircuiting of air from the supply area to the exhaust area. High-Efficiency Particulate Air (HEPA) Filters: To ensure adequate functioning, install HEPA filters carefully and maintain the filters according to the instructions of the manufacturer. Maintain written records of all pre-filter and HEPA maintenance and monitoring. Manufacturers of room-air recirculation units CHL/HP/PCI 06 Page 5 of 7 should provide installation instructions and documentation of the filtration efficiency and of the overall efficiency of the unit in removing airborne particles from a space of a given size. Maintenance and Engineering Issues: Maintenance personnel should notify infection control personnel before performing maintenance on ventilation systems servicing TB patient-care areas. Maintenance personnel should schedule routine preventive maintenance for all components of the ventilation systems (e.g., fans, filters, ducts, supply diffusers, and exhaust grills) and air-cleaning devices. Quality control (QC) checks should be conducted to verify that environmental controls are operating as designed and that records are current. Provisions for emergency electrical power should be made so that the performance of essential environmental controls is not interrupted during a power failure. 12. Respiratory Protection: The availability of Airborne Infection Isolation rooms minimizes the number of areas in which exposure to M. tuberculosis might occur. But staff entering AII rooms and dealing with cough-inducing or aerosol-generating procedures are at risk of exposures. Therefore, they should use respiratory protective equipment in these situations. N95 or TB mask is used for this purpose 13. Managing Patients with Suspected or Confirmed Airborne Diseases / TB Disease in Emergency Medical Transport Situations / Ambulances a) EMT / Ambulance personnel should be included in a comprehensive screening program to test for M. tuberculosis infection and provide baseline screening and follow-up testing. b) Patients with suspected or confirmed air borne infections / infectious TB disease who are transported in an ambulance should wear a surgical mask, if possible, and drivers, HCWs, and other staff who are transporting the patient might consider wearing an N95 mask. c) The ambulance ventilation system should be operated in the non-recirculating mode, and the maximum amount of outdoor air should be provided to facilitate dilution. If the vehicle has a rear exhaust fan, use this fan during transport. If the vehicle is equipped with a supplemental recirculating ventilation unit that passes air through HEPA filters before returning it to the vehicle, use this unit to increase the number of ACH. Air should flow from the cab (front of vehicle), over the patient, and out the rear exhaust fan. If an ambulance is not used, the ventilation system for the vehicle should bring in as much outdoor air as possible, and the system should be set to non-recirculating. If possible, physically isolate the cab from the rest of the vehicle, and place the patient in the rear seat. d) EMT / Ambulance personnel should be included in the follow-up contact investigations of patients with airborne infections / infectious TB disease. CHL/HP/PCI 06 Page 6 of 7 H. IMPLEMENTATION 1. 2. 3. 4. Consultant Microbiologist and Head – Infection Control Team All Consultants All Physicians / Medical Officers All Nursing Supervisors / Nurses / Staff in all departments I. REFERENCES 1. 2. 3. Sri Lanka College of Microbiologists ; 2005; Hospital Infection Control manual CDC guidelines on Isolation precautions -2007 JCI ACCREDITATION STANDARDS FOR HOSPITALS – 5TH EDITION J. POLICIES CROSS-LINKAGES 1. ACC 6 K. ATTACHMENTS 1. Checklist for Terminal Cleaning of Airborne Infection Isolation Rooms 2. Infection Control and Ventilation Requirements for PE Rooms CHL/HP/PCI 06 Page 7 of 7