Title: Control of Gastrointestinal Disease Outbreaks
1Control of Gastrointestinal Disease Outbreaks
- Bruce Gamage
- Infection Control Consultant
- BC Centre for Disease Control
2Objectives
- Outbreak Control
- Decontamination Protocol
- Resources
3Settings
- Care Facilities
- Acute Hospitals
- Schools/Day Care Centres
- Hotel/Restaurant
4Who ya gonna call?
- When 3 or more cases of suspect gastroenteritis
occur within a 4 day period - (Start collecting samples!)
- Infection Control Practitioner (if applicable)
- Facility Director of Care (if applicable)
-
- EHO/ PHI
-
- BCCDC GI Outbreak Coordinator
5OUTBREAK CONTROL MEASURES(health care)
- Internal
- Confine ill residents/clients to their rooms
until 48 hours post symptoms. - Exclude any ill employees from work until 48
hours post symptoms. - External
- Advise staff not work at another facility unless
they are well for a minimum of 72 hours after
their last shift at an affected facility.
6OUTBREAK CONTROL MEASURES (health care)
- Use transmission based precautions
- Gloves - for providing any direct care
- Gowns when contamination of care givers
clothing is possible - Masks when there is a risk of droplet spread of
infectious material (i.e. cleaning up areas
grossly contaminated with feces or vomit, caring
for a resident who is vomiting). - Review hand hygiene procedures with staff.
- Alcohol Hand Rinses?
7OUTBREAK CONTROL MEASURES (health care)
- Ensure surfaces contaminated by feces or vomitus
are immediately cleaned and disinfected. - Implement a program of increased cleaning and
sanitizing of common touch surfaces such as door
handles, handrails, and sink/toilet handles. - The agent of choice for disinfection is household
bleach diluted 150/ ASHP 116.
8OUTBREAK CONTROL MEASURES (health care)
- Consider
- postponing transfers to other facilities and
admissions/re-admissions unless medically
warranted - limiting the use of casual or part-time staff
that work at other facilities - cohort nursing and other staff to limit potential
spread from ill to well residents/other parts of
facility - decreasing or discontinuing group activities and
outings until the outbreak is resolved. - Limiting visitors during the outbreak (this does
not mean excluding family members involved in
care)
9OUTBREAK CONTROL MEASURES (schools/daycares)
- Children who become ill with nausea, vomiting or
diarrhea must be removed from the classroom
immediately. - Ill children should be sent home as soon as
arrangements can be made. - Affected children should not return to school
until at least 48 hours after symptoms have
subsided.
10OUTBREAK CONTROL MEASURES (schools/daycares)
- Information on viral gastroenteritis and control
at home - Hand washing is most important
- Regular education sessions for staff and students
on hand hygiene - Special consideration must be given to the
cleaning of vomiting or fecal accidents. - Failing to properly clean contaminated areas
will contribute to rapid spread and continuation
of outbreaks.
11CONTROL MEASURES (Restaurants/Hotels)
- Report outbreak
- Identify source
- food handlers restricted from working at least 48
hrs after the symptoms have cleared - food discarded other than unopened containers
(use discretion) - food exposed, even indirectly, to vomit is
potentially infectious from aerosol contamination
- drinking water or ice cubes, discard
- containers for water or ice cubes must be
disinfected. - food can become source if washed with
contaminated water.
12CONTROL MEASURES (Restaurants/Hotels)
- Role of the environment
- vomiting generates virus-containing aerosols
- environment can be readily contaminated
- food placed on contaminated surface could become
a source of infection - contamination of the taps of a wash sink source
when washing hands.
13EHOs provide recommendations on
- Food service worker hygiene
- Kitchen sanitation
- Proper food cooking and refrigeration practices
- Food safety education (i.e. FOOD SAFE).
- Infection control
- Water supply
- Disinfection
- Sample collection and transport
14Decontamination Protocol
- Accident Clean up
- Wear gloves, gown and mask
- Use paper towels to soak up excess liquid
- Clean with detergent and hot water
- Disinfect with freshly made 150 bleach or 116
ASHP - Wash hands using soap and warm running water for
at least 30 seconds.
15Decontamination Protocol
- If cleaning food preparation areas
- Disinfect with freshly prepared 150 bleach/116
ASHP - Dispose of any exposed food (food that has been
handled by an infected person or exposed to the
virus by someone vomiting in the area). - Wash all dishes, utensils and trays in a
commercial dishwasher preferably with hot water
rinse (gt82C) or a chemical sanitizer. - Do not to cross-contaminate dirty to clean dishes
16Treatment of Specific Materials
- Wash linen in a hot water (gt71.1 for 25 mins.)
and detergent - Clean Vinyl furniture or mattresses with
detergent and hot water then disinfect - Place furniture or cloth mattresses outside in
the sun for a few hours or disinfect with
Bleach/ASHP or steam clean (minimum 60C water).
17Treatment of Specific Materials
- Clean carpets with hot water and detergent or
steam clean. - Wash non-disposable mop heads in a hot water
(gt71.1C for 25 mins.) and detergent. - Clean bathrooms then disinfect with 150 bleach
solution/ 116 ASHP.
18Other Disinfectants
- QAC - not effective against non-enveloped
viruses. - Phenolics - may be effective at 2-4 times the
recommended dilutions, but not well supported. - Alcohols studies suggest gt85 ethanol more
effective against non-enveloped viruses.
19Summary
- Focus on
- Hand hygiene/barriers
- Exclude ill staff
- Confine ill residents/clients
- Clean and disinfect environment.
20Resources
- www.bccdc.org
- Managing Outbreaks of Gastroenteritis in
Residential Care Facilities,Updated version
released summer 2003 - A Guide to Laboratory Investigation of
Gastrointestinal Disease Outbreaks, 2002 - Bruce Gamage, Infection Control Consultant
- bruce.gamage_at_bccdc.ca
- 604-660-6076
- Lorraine McIntyre, GI Outbreak Coordinator
- Lorraine.macintyre_at_bccdc.ca
- 604-660-6079