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IMMUNIZATIONS FOR HEALTH CARE WORKERS

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Understand the importance of vaccines in general ... Nosocomial transmission documented ... In last decade numerous nosocomial outbreaks reported ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IMMUNIZATIONS FOR HEALTH CARE WORKERS


1
IMMUNIZATIONS FOR HEALTH CARE WORKERS
  • Fran Ircink RN, NP
  • Clinic Manager
  • Employee Health Service
  • February 20, 2008

2
Objectives
  • Understand the importance of vaccines in general
  • Review currently recommended vaccines for health
    care workers (HCWs)
  • Highlight recent vaccine updates for HCWs

3
Vaccine History
  • The impact of vaccination on the health
  • of the worlds peoples is hard to exaggerate.
  • With the exception of safe water, no other
  • modality, not even antibiotics, had had such
  • a major effect on mortality reduction and
  • population growth.
  • (Plotkin)

4
Definition of HCWs
  • Physicians, nurses, NAs, MAs, EMS
  • personnel, dental care professionals,
  • students in the medical setting, other
  • hospital staff (custodians, food service
  • workers, volunteers, etc.)

5
Immunizations for HCWs
  • Recommendations based on
  • Nosocomial transmission documented
  • HCWs at significant risk for acquiring or
    transmitting infection

6
Recommendations
  • Hepatitis B
  • Influenza
  • MMR (measles , mumps, rubella)
  • Varicella (chickenpox)
  • Tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis
  • Meningococcal

7
Hepatitis B Disease
  • Virus affecting the liver
  • Can cause acute and chronic liver disease
  • Can cause liver cancer
  • Incubation period 6 weeks 6 months
  • gt 2 billion persons worldwide infected with the
    hepatitis B virus at some time in their lives
  • 350 million life-long carriers of disease and can
    transmit virus to others
  • One million carriers die each year from liver
    disease and liver cancer

8
Hepatitis B Disease
  • Number of new infections per year declined from
    average of 450,000 in the 1980s to about 80,000
    in 1999
  • Greatest decline occurred among children and
    adolescents due to routine hepatitis B
    vaccination

9
Hepatitis B Transmission
  • Transmission via blood/body fluid via
  • mucocutaneous and contaminated sharps
  • exposures
  • 30 of infected without identifiable risk factors
  • 5-10 infected become chronic carriers
  • Transmission risk 100X gt than HIV

10
Hepatitis B Transmission
  • Risk of infection related to degree of contact
    with blood in the work place and to hepatitis B e
    antigen (HBeAg) status of source person
  • HBV can survive in dried blood at room
    temperature on environmental surfaces for at
    least 1 week
  • Potential for HBV transmission through contact
    with environmental surfaces has been demonstrated
    in investigations of HBV outbreaks among patients
    and staff of hemodialysis units

11
Hepatitis B - HCWs
  • HBV infection a well recognized occupational risk
    for HCP
  • Prior to 1987 - 1997 100-200 HCWs died annually
    due to hepatitis B infection
  • The annual number of occupational infections
    decreased 95 since hepatitis B vaccine became
    available in 1982, from gt10,000 in 1983 to lt400
    in 2001.

12
Hepatitis B Vaccine
  • Recombinant vaccine licensed in 1986
  • Effectiveness 95 in adults who completed 3 dose
    series
  • Immunity probably lifelong
  • OSHA Blood Borne Pathogen Standard (1991)
  • Mandates that hepatitis B vaccine be made
    available at the employers expense to all HCWs
    who are occupationally exposed to blood or other
    potentially infectious materials

13
Hepatitis B Vaccine
  • Post vaccine series antibody testing for HCWs
  • recommended
  • Check titer 1-2 months after dose 3
  • If positive/immune no need for future doses or
    periodic blood tests to check for immunity
  • 100 effective when develop positive antibody
    response after vaccination
  • If negative/not immune repeat 3 dose series
  • If positive/immune done
  • If negative/not immune non-responder-susceptible
    to hepatitis B

14
Influenza - Disease
  • Two types - A and B that cause epidemic human
    disease
  • Causes 36,000 deaths and over 200,000
    hospitalizations on average in the United States
    annually
  • Incubation period 1-4 days. Can be infectious
    from the day before symptoms begin through
    approximately 5 days after illness onset
  • Characterized by the abrupt onset of fever,
    myalgia, headache, malaise, nonproductive cough,
    sore throat, and rhinitis

15
Influenza - Disease
  • Usually resolves after 3-7 days cough and
    malaise can persist for gt2 weeks
  • Can exacerbate underlying medical conditions
    (e.g., pulmonary or cardiac disease), lead to
    secondary bacterial pneumonia or primary
    influenza viral pneumonia, or occur as part of a
    coinfection with other viral or bacterial
    pathogens

16
Influenza - Transmission
  • Influenza viruses spread from person to
  • person, primarily through respiratory droplet
  • transmission (cough, sneeze) in close
  • proximity to an uninfected person

17
Influenza Vaccine - TIV
  • Licensed in 1945
  • Inactivated vaccine
  • Effectiveness 70-90 in adults lt 65 yrs of age
  • Contains killed viruses does not cause
    influenza in recipient
  • Administered intramuscularly
  • Approved for use among persons aged gt6 months,
    including those who are healthy and those with
    chronic medical conditions

18
Influenza Vaccine - LAIV
  • Licensed in 2007
  • Live attenuated vaccine
  • Effectiveness 92
  • Contains live, attenuated viruses and, therefore,
    has a potential to produce mild signs or symptoms
    related to influenza virus infection
  • Administered intranasally
  • Approved only for use among healthy persons aged
    5-49 yrs of age

19
Influenza Vaccine
  • Both Vaccines
  • contain strains of influenza viruses that are
    antigenically equivalent to the annually
    recommended strains one influenza A (H3N2)
    virus, one A (H1N1) virus, and one B virus
  • grown in eggs
  • administered annually to provide optimal
    protection
  • against influenza virus infection
  • A cost-benefit economic study estimated an
    average annual savings of 13.66/person
    vaccinated

20
Influenza Vaccine - HCWs
  • Health care-associated transmission of influenza
    has been documented among many patient
    populations in a variety of clinical settings,
    and infections have been linked epidemiologically
    to unvaccinated health care workers
  • HCWs are included in the high risk group for
    vaccination
  • CDC - All health-care workers should be
    vaccinated against influenza annually to protect
    themselves, their patients, and communities
  • Vaccination levels for health-care workers are
    typically lt40

21
Influenza Vaccine - UWHC
  • Influenza Vaccine Usage in UWHC Employees in 2007
  • Patient Care Titles 64
  • Non Patient Care Titles 62
  • EHS Survey 2006 Reasons for not taking flu shot
  • Received a flu shot elsewhere
    28
  • Fear of injections
    6
  • I never get the flu-dont need the shot
    39
  • Contraindication to receiving flu shot
    4
  • Fear of getting flu from the vaccine
    12
  • Fear of side effects 11


22
Influenza Vaccine - Update
  • New JCAHO Standard Effective 1/1/07 requires
  • organizations to
  • Establish annual influenza vaccination program
    that includes at least staff and licensed
    independent practitioners
  • Provide influenza vaccinations on-site

23
Influenza Vaccine - Update
  • Educate staff about flu vaccination non-vaccine
    control measures (i.e., use of appropriate
    precautions) and diagnosis, transmission and
    potential impact of influenza
  • Annually evaluate vaccination rates and reasons
    for non-participation in the organizations
    immunization program
  • Implement enhancements to program to increase
    participation

24
Influenza Vaccine - Update
  • Infectious Disease Society of America (1/24/07)
  • The top professional society of infectious
    diseases experts is insisting that all
    physicians, nurses, and other health workers
    caring for patients be vaccinated against
    influenza each year or decline in writing
  • In 2005
  • 7 states had legislation requiring annual
    influenza vaccination of health-care workers or
    the signing of an informed declination
  • 15 states had regulations regarding vaccination
    of health-care workers in long-term--care
    facilities
  • Future Considerations
  • Mandatory / Declination Waivers

25
Influenza - Update
  • Flu Outbreak in 11 states
  • New strain emerging not targeted by this years
    vaccine
  • H3N2/Brisbane-like emerged near end of
    Australias flu season, too late to be included
    in the US vaccine
  • So far, majority of flu cases caused by strains
    that are a good match to the vaccine and should
    provide some cross-protection against the new
    strain
  • Not too late to get influenza vaccine

26
Measles, Mumps, Rubella (MMR)
  • Licensed in 1971
  • Live virus vaccine
  • 2 doses MMR for HCWs born in 1957 or later
    without serologic evidence of immunity or prior
    vaccination
  • For HCWs born prior to 1957, immune if
  • Physician diagnosed disease
  • Laboratory evidence of immunity
  • Documentation of two doses MMR given on/after 1st
    birthday separated by 28 days or more

27
Measles (Rubeola) - Disease
  • Serious, acute, highly communicable rash
  • illness which may result in ear infection
  • (7-9), diarrhea (8), serious lung
  • infection such as pneumonia (1-6) or
  • inflammation of the brain (1 in 1,500)

28
Measles Disease
  • Worldwide
  • One of the most infectious diseases in the world
  • gt 90 of people who are not immune get measles
    if exposed to the virus
  • gt 20 million people get sick with measles each
    year, nearly 345,00 cases are fatal

29
Measles Rubeola - Disease
  • U.S.
  • Before measles immunization available, nearly
    everyone in the U.S. got measles. Average of 450
    measles-associated deaths reported each year
    between 1953 and 1963
  • Up to 20 percent of persons with measles are
    hospitalized
  • 3 of every 1,000 persons with measles will die in
    the U.S.
  • Since 1997, lt 150 cases reported annually
  • 85 of cases in 2004 were imported

30
Measles - Transmission
  • Spread by droplet and airborne (less common)
    routes
  • Incubation period from exposure to rash 7-18 days
  • Contagious from 4 days before until 4 days after
    onset of rash

31
Measles - Vaccine
  • Licensed in U.S. in 1963
  • Live-virus vaccine
  • Effectiveness - 95 one dose 99 two doses
  • Given as single antigen or part of MMR vaccine
  • 2 doses if born after 1956 given on/after 1st
    birthday
  • In U.S., widespread use of vaccine led to a gt 99
    reduction in measles compared with the
    pre-vaccine era.
  • If immunization stopped, measles would increase
    to pre-vaccine levels.

32
Mumps - Disease
  • Acute viral disease characterized by fever,
    swelling and tenderness of one or more of the
    salivary glands. Usually mild viral disease
  • Incubation period range 12-25 days
  • Estimated 212,000 cases occurred in the U.S. in
    1964
  • Annual reported cases in U.S. below 300 between
  • 2001- 2005
  • 2006 multistate outbreak (mainly in Midwest) gt
    4,000 cases reported

33
Mumps - Disease
  • Complications
  • Can include deafness, inflammation of the
    testicles, ovaries, or breasts respectively,
    pancreatitis, meningitis, encephalitis, and
    spontaneous abortion
  • With the exception of deafness, complications
    more common among adults than children

34
Mumps - Transmission
  • Airborne transmission
  • Droplet spread
  • Direct contact with saliva of infected person
  • Contact with contaminated fomites

35
Mumps Vaccine
  • Licensed in 1967
  • Live virus vaccine
  • Effectiveness 78-91 one dose 90 two
    doses
  • In 1986 and 1987 resurgence of mumps with 12,848
    cases reported in 1987
  • Since 1989, incidence of mumps declined with 266
    reported cases in 2001

36
Mumps Vaccine
  • Recent mumps decrease probably due to children
    having received a second dose of mumps vaccine
    (as part of 2nd MMR) and the eventual development
    of immunity in those who did not gain protection
    after the first mumps vaccination
  • If vaccination against mumps stopped, expected
    number of cases to climb back to pre-vaccine
    levels since mumps easily spread among
    unvaccinated persons

37
Mumps - Update
  • Its the largest mumps epidemic in this country
    in more than two decades, with confirmed cases in
    at least eight states, most in the Midwest. The
    bulk of the cases are in Iowa, where up to 975
    people have been affected, and the virus is
    spreading.
  • Online News Hours, April 20th 2006

38
Mumps Vaccine -Update
  • All persons who work in health-care facilities
    should be immune to mumps
  • Adequate mumps vaccination for health-care
    workers born in or after 1957 consists of 2 doses
    of a mumps vaccine
  • HCWs with no history of mumps vaccination and no
    other evidence of immunity should receive 2 doses
    (at a minimum interval of 28 days between doses)

39
Mumps Vaccine -Update
  • HCWs who have received only 1 dose previously
    should receive a second dose
  • Birth before 1957 is only presumptive evidence of
    immunity, health-care facilities should consider
    recommending 1 dose of mumps vaccine for
    unvaccinated workers born before 1957 who do not
    have a history of physician-diagnosed mumps or
    laboratory evidence of mumps immunity

40
Rubella (German Measles)
  • Mild febrile viral disease with a diffuse
    maculopapular rash resembling measles or scarlet
    fever
  • Since 1996, gt 50 of the reported rubella cases
    have been among adults
  • Since 2004 no longer endemic in U.S but still
    common in many parts of the world

41
Rubella (German Measles)
  • Complications
  • Congenital Rubella Syndrome (CRS)
  • Occurs in up to 90 of infants born to mothers
    infected with rubella during the first trimester
    of pregnancy
  • Results in heart defects, cataracts, mental
    retardation, and deafness
  • From 1998 through 2004 93 of infants born with
    CRS were born to foreign-born mothers

42
Rubella - Transmission
  • Contact with nasopharyngeal secretions of
    infected people
  • Droplet spread or direct contact with patients

43
Rubella - Vaccine
  • Licensed in 1969
  • Live virus vaccine
  • Effectiveness 95 1st dose
  • In 1964-1965, before rubella immunization was
    used routinely in the U.S., an epidemic of
    rubella resulted in
  • estimated 20,000 infants born with CRS
  • 2,100 neonatal deaths
  • 11,250 miscarriages
  • Of the 20,000 infants born with CRS, 11,600 were
    deaf, 3,580 were blind, and 1,800 were mentally
    retarded

44
Rubella Vaccine
  • Since 2001, fewer than 25 cases of rubella
    reported annually (99.8 decline compared with
    pre-vaccine era)
  • Since 2001 an average of 1 case of CRS reported
  • annually in the U.S.
  • If stopped rubella immunization, immunity would
    decline and rubella would once again return,
    resulting in pregnant women becoming infected
    with rubella and then giving birth to infants
    with CRS

45
Rubella - HCW
  • Department of Health and Family Services
  • Chapter 124 Hospitals
  • Protection against rubella the hospitals
    employee health program shall include vaccination
    or confirmed immunity against rubella for
    everyone who has direct contact with rubella
    patients, pediatric patients or female patients
    of childbearing age

46
Varicella (Chickenpox)
  • Highly contagious viral disease
  • Prior to varicella vaccine almost all persons in
    the U.S. had suffered from chickenpox by
    adulthood
  • Usually mild, but may be severe in some infants,
    adolescents, and adults

47
Varicella (Chickenpox)
  • Complications
  • Secondary bacterial infections
  • Pneumonia
  • Central nervous system involvement

48
Varicella - Transmission
  • Person to person by
  • Direct contact
  • Droplet
  • Airborne spread of vesicle fluid of patients with
  • shingles (zoster)
  • Indirect contact
  • articles freshly soiled by discharges from
    vesicles and mucous membranes of infected people

49
Varicella - Vaccine
  • Licensed in 1995
  • Live virus vaccine
  • Effectiveness 80 - 90 1st dose 98 2nd dose
  • Past Recommendations
  • One dose 12 months 12 years
  • 2 doses age 13 or older

50
Varicella - Vaccine
  • New Recommendations
  • All children lt13 years of age should be
    administered routinely two doses of
    varicella-containing vaccine
  • Second dose catch-up varicella vaccination is
    recommended for children, adolescents, and adults
    who previously had received one dose to improve
    individual protection against varicella

51
Varicella - HCWs
  • All HCWs should be immune to varicella
  • Immune if
  • 2 doses varicella given at least 28 days apart
  • History of varicella or herpes zoster based on
    physician diagnosis, laboratory evidence of
    immunity, or laboratory confirmation of disease

52
Tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis
  • Pertussis Disease
  • Whooping cough - highly contagious respiratory
    tract infection
  • Initially resembles ordinary cold, may eventually
    turn more serious, particularly in infants
  • Characterized by irritating cough becoming
    paroxysmal within 1-2 weeks and lasting 1-2
    months or longer
  • Best prevention is through vaccine

53
Tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis
  • Pertussis Disease
  • Immunity from prior illness or childhood vaccine
    is not lifelong
  • In recent years in U.S., pertussis recognized
    with increasing frequency in adolescents and
    adults
  • 1010 cases reported in 1976 25,287 cases
    reported in 2004

54
Tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis
  • Pertussis Transmission
  • Direct contact with discharges from respiratory
    mucous membranes of infected persons by the
    airborne and droplet routes usually through
    coughing and sneezing
  • Incubation period 7-20 days
  • Most contagious before the coughing starts and
    contagious for weeks after
  • Secondary attack rates 50 - 100 in close
    contacts

55
Tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis
  • Pertussis Complications
  • Bacterial pneumonia and rib fracture
  • Infants are at highest risk for apnea, pneumonia,
    seizures, encephalopathy, and death

56
Tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis
  • Pertussis HCWs
  • Health care environments - setting for a number
    of pertussis outbreaks
  • resulting in transmissions to HCWs, vulnerable
    infants and other patients
  • In last decade numerous nosocomial outbreaks
    reported

57
Tetanus-diphtheria-acellular pertussis-Vaccine
(Tdap)
  • Licensed in 2005
  • Effectiveness 92
  • Contain reduced pertussis antigen compared with
    pediatric formula and similar amounts of tetanus
    and diphtheria toxoids in adult dT booster
  • Single dose booster for age 19-64
  • HCWs working in hospitals or ambulatory care
    settings and have direct patient contact should
    receive a single dose of Tdap as soon as feasible
    if they have not previously received Tdap
  • Priority given to vaccination of HCWs with direct
    contact with infants aged lt12 months. Interval
    of 2 or more years from the last dose of Td
    recommended for the Tdap dose

58
Meningococcol Disease
  • Acute bacterial disease caused by Neisseria
    Meningitidis characterized by
  • sudden onset of fever, intense headache, nausea
    and often vomiting, stiff neck and frequently a
    petechial rash
  • In the U.S., meningococcal disease is usually
    caused by groups A, B, C, Y, and W-135 of the
    meningococcus bacteria

59
Meningococcol Disease
  • Approximately 2,600 cases of meningococcal
    meningitis in the U.S. each year mainly in
    children less than five years old
  • Children younger than two years old have the
    highest incidence, with a second peak incidence
    between 15 to 24 years of age

60
Meningococcol Disease
  • 11-19 of survivors deafness, other neurologic
    impairment, and impaired circulation leading to
    gangrene and amputation of limbs
  • Death occurs in 10 to 14 of people with
    meningococcal disease
  • highest in infants and adolescents

61
Meningococcol Transmission
  • Close contact with direct contact including
    respiratory droplets from aerosols and secretions
    from nose and throat of infected
  • people (patients or asymptomatic carriers)
  • Incubation period 2-10 days, commonly 3-4 days

62
Meningococcol Vaccine - HCWs
  • Although N. meningitidis regularly isolated in
    clinical laboratories, it has infrequently been
    reported as a cause of laboratory-acquired
    infection
  • Two probable cases of fatal laboratory-acquired
    meningococcal disease and the results of an
    inquiry to identify previously unreported cases
    reported
  • The findings indicate that N. meningitidis
    isolates pose a risk for microbiologists and
    should be handled in a manner that minimizes risk
    for exposure to aerosols or droplets

63
Meningococcol Vaccine
  • MPSV4 Licensed in 1981 Ages 2-10 and gt55
  • 85-100 protection for 35 years in older
    children and adults
  • High risk need revaccination every 35 years
  • Not recommended and should not be administered
    routinely for adolescents ages 1112 or for
    adolescents entering high school. Adolescents in
    these age groups are recommended only to receive
    MCV4
  • An acceptable alternative for persons at elevated
    risk ages 1154 years where MCV4 is not available

64
Meningococcol Vaccine
  • MCV4 Licensed in 2005 Ages 11-55
  • Need for revaccination not yet known
  • Higher production of antibodies and longer
    duration of protection and similar efficacy
    compared to MPSV4 expected in adolescents and
    adults
  • Both current vaccines effective against A,C,Y and
    W-135. Not effective against group B
  • Recommended for microbiologists who are routinely
    exposed to isolates of N. meningitidis that might
    be aerosolized

65
Immunizations of HCWs - UWHC
  • Immunization recommendations have become more
    comprehensive and standardized over the years
  • All new applicants screened for appropriate
    immunizations
  • Old timers may not be up to date
  • Catch ups via periodic chart audits
  • episodic visits

66
Future Considerations
  • Greater emphasis on making sure HCWs adhere to
    current vaccine recommendations
  • Better documentation of HCWs vaccination status
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