Title: CURRENT INFECTION PROBLEMS FOR EMBALMERS AND FUNERAL DIRECTORS
1CURRENT INFECTION PROBLEMS FOR EMBALMERS AND
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
WHATS BUGGING YOU?
2CONTACT INFORMATION
- Fred Roberts MD, FRCPC
- Medical Director of Infection Control, Fraser
Health Authority - Clinical Professor Emeritus, UBC Department of
Pathology and Laboratory Medicine. - E- mail drfjr_at_shaw.ca
3WHERE ARE THE RISKS ?
- BODY REMOVAL AND MANIPULATION
- EMBALMING
- BODY FLUIDS
- ENVIRONMENT
- FUNERAL SERVICES
- BODY FLUID LEAKS AND HANDLING
- DECEASEDS RELATIVES
4RISKS FROM RELATIVES
- DECEASED
- INFECTED RELATIVES IN INCUBATION STAGE AT SERVICE
- FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND OTHERS AT THE SERVICE
5INCIDENCE OF INFECTIONSBeck-Sague C et al.
Universal Precautions and Mortuary Practitioners
. J Occup Med 199133874-878
- Survey in 1988 of 860 members of National Select
Morticians. 539 responded - 89 (17) reported infectious diseases related to
their occupation. - - Hepatitis 26
- - Skin infections (Staphylococcal) 27
- - Pulmonary and skin tuberculosis 16
- - Other infections mostly respiratory 9
- - Primary sepsis 5
- - Lice and Scabies 6
- 39 reported at least one needle stick injury in
the last year.
6CONTRIBUTING FACTORS
- ATTITUDES
- PHYSICAL PLANT
- EQUIPMENT
- COST
- ORGANIZATION AND PLANNING
7CONTRIBUTING ATTITUDES
- I HAVE BEEN DOING THIS FOR 20 YEARS WITH NO
PROBLEMS!! WHY SHOULD I CHANGE??? - THE INFECTION PROBLEMS ARE CONSTANTLY CHANGING.
WHAT WORKED 20 YEARS AGO MAY NOT WORK TODAY.
8UNRECOGNIZED INFECTIONS
- VIRAL HEPATITIS
- HIV (AIDS)
- TUBERCULOSIS
- RESPIRATORY OUTBREAKS (SARS)
- BRUCELLOSIS
- HEMORRHAGIC FEVERS
9SOURCES OF INFECTION HAZARDS
- RESPIRATORY TRACT
- AIRBORNE
- DROPLET
- CONTACT
- SKIN
- FOMITES
- INGESTION AND INJECTION
10RESPIRATORY TRACT HAZARDS
- DROPLET RESPIRATORY SECRETION DROPLETS ARE
LARGE AND SETTLE OUT QUICKLY. CONTAMINATION FOR 1
METRE. - AIRBORNE RESPIRATORY SECRETIONS DRY INTO SMALL
DROPLET NUCLEI THAT STAY SUSPENDED IN THE AIR.
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13TUBERCULOSIS
- Spread by inhalation of droplet nuclei
- Incidence varies yearly and with certain social
and ethnic groups. - Often found involving family groups
- Drug resistant strains are occurring
- A recognized risk for embalmers
14RISKS OF TB TO EMBALMERS
- Many Papers Demonstrating increased rates in
Medical Students, Pathologists and Morgue
Workers. - 1998 JOEM Vol. 40 pp497-503
- 864 Funeral Home Employees
- Positive skin tests for TB (designates primary
infection) double in those that embalm over those
that do not.
15RISKS OF TB TO EMBALMERS
- January 2000 NEJM Vol. 342 pp.246-248
- Patient with AIDS and known TB. Stopped TB
treatment. Died with pneumonia. - The embalmer with 15 years experience developed
shortness of breath and other symptoms and found
to have TB with the same strain as the embalmed
person. - 2001 Chest Vol.119 pp 640-642
- In Florida a review of new TB cases found two
similar cases to the above.
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17PREVENTION OF TUBERCULOSIS
- Prevention of aerosols - equipment
- Proper ventilation
- Use of masks
- Baseline assessment at time of employment
- skin test or chest x-ray
- assessment after known exposure
18Aerosol Production
- BODY MOVEMENTS
- ROLLING AND TURNING
- ABDOMINAL COMPRESSION
- CHEST COMPRESSION
19AEROSOL PRODUCTION
VENTURI TYPE SUCTION
20AEROSOL PRODUCTION
To prevent water line contamination a back flow
valve is required.
Aerosols can be produced with the splashing in
the sink.
VENTURI SUCTION
21NO BACKFLOW VALVE
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23MASKS FOR TB PREVENTION
- MASK SHOULD BE MARKED AS N95
- WCB REQUIRES N95 MASKS TO BE FIT TESTED
- DUCK BILL TYPE ARE MORE COMFORTABLE THAN THE HARD
CONE TYPE
24Duck Bill Mask
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26PROCEDURAL MASK
27Surgical Mask
28Hepa Filter Mask
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30MASK WITH EYE SHIELD
31FACE SHIELD
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35VENTILATION FOR TB PREVENTION
- FOR MORGUES THE RECOMMENDATION IS FOR 12 AIR
EXCHANGES PER HOUR - AIR EXHAUST MUST BE DIRECTLY TO THE OUTSIDE TO
PREVENT SPREAD THROUGHOUT THE BUILDING. THIS MUST
BE AWAY FROM INTAKE VENTS. - ULTRAVIOLET LIGHTS CAN BE USED TO TREAT THE
EXHAUSTED AIR. - REMEMBER TO LEAVE THE VENTILATION RUNNING AFTER
THE PROCEDURE TO CLEAR THE ROOM.
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37DROPLET SPREAD
- THIS INCLUDES SARS AND SIMILAR AGENTS AND
INFLUENZA. - VENTILATION IS NOT A SERIOUS PROBLEM AND
PRECAUTIONS ARE SIMILAR TO THOSE FOR CONTACT
HAZARDS. - GLOVES, GOWNS, MASKS, FACESHIELDS, CAPS AND BOOTS
ARE ALL CONSIDERATIONS
38INFLUENZA
- Occurs annually between Nov and April.
- Three types - A,B, and C.
- Type A the usual epidemic strain.
- Minor changes occur from year to year (antigenic
drift). - Major changes (antigenic shift) occurs
sporadically with Type A often causing a
panepidemic.
39INFLUENZA
- Mostly Droplet spread but airborne occurs in
crowded areas. - Usually chest infection, cough, fever, headache,
muscle aches for 2-7 days. - Vaccine available against the common type A and
B strains of the past few years. - Vaccine must be given yearly for protection.
40MRSA
- Their importance is the limited antibiotics that
are effective. - Control measures aimed at preventing persons
susceptible to infection ( burns, Surgical and
ICU patients etc ) from exposure
41MRSA
- Risk to the embalmer no greater than with other
staphylococci unless they have factors making
them more susceptible to infection.. - Standard precautions are adequate for protection.
42CONTACT HAZARD PRECAUTIONS
- HAND WASHING
- PROTECTIVE DEVICES
- BARRIER TECHNIQUES
- DISINFECTION AND STERILIZATION
43PATHOGEN
PROTECTIVE NORMAL FLORA
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48ARE YOUR GLOVES, GOWN OR MASK A RISK ON THE
OUTSIDE?
IF YOU TOUCH SOMETHING WITH THEM WILL IT SPREAD
THE CONTAMINATION?
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51APRONS
52Fluid Resistant Gowns
53BODY SUIT
54IMPORTANCE OF WATER PROOFING
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56CONTACT HAZARDS ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS
- DESIGATION OF CLEAN AND DIRTY AREAS
- PROPER CLEANING TECHNIQUES.
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58PREP ROOM POLICY
- DOES THE ROOM HAVE DISTINCT BORDERS?
- ARE THERE BIOHAZARD WARNING SIGNS?
- ARE THERE TRAFFIC CONTROL MEASURES?
- ARE THERE ADEQUATE CLEANING, DISINFECTION AND
STERILIZATION PRACTICES? - ARE THERE PROPER PRACTICES FOR DISPOSAL OF
BIOHAZARDOUS GARBAGE? - ARE THERE WRITTEN POLICIES FOR MANAGING ACCIDENTS
LIKE SHARPS INJURIES? - ARE THERE POLICIES RELATED TO PANDEMICS, WORKER
ILLNESS AND INJURY, IMMUNIZATION ETC
59HAZARDS FROM INJECTION
60AIDS
- A retrovirus spread in blood.
- Present in many body fluids -saliva etc. but does
not seem to be infectious. - Commonest transmissions - sex, blood transfusions
and sharps injuries. - Not as infectious as Hepatitis B
61VIRAL HEPATITIS
- Hepatitis is inflammation of the liver. Viruses
only one of many different causes. - Hepatitis viruses named as Hepatitis A - E
- Hepatitis A and E are food and water spread
- Hepatitis B,C, D are spread by blood
- Vaccines are available for only Hepatitis A and B
62VIRAL HEPATITIS
- Virus Method of Spread Persistent
Infection Vaccine - Hepatitis A Fecal Oral
No Yes - Hepatitis B Blood exposure Yes
Yes - Hepatitis C Blood exposure
Yes No - Hepatitis D Blood exposure Yes
No - Requires Hepatitis B to be present
- Hepatitis E Fecal-Oral
No No
63VIRAL HEPATITIS - PREVENTION
- Immunization for Hepatitis A B
- Adherence to Standard Precautions for all
hepatitis types - Procedures and Practices to reduce the chance of
sharps injuries
64PRION DISEASES
- Not one of the usual infectious agents but an
abnormal protein. - Different diseases in different animals.
- Except for bovine disease spread to humans from
other animals not known. - Several human forms with CJD the commonest.
65PRION DISEASE - CJD
- 3 types - hereditary, sporadic, variant.
- A slow progressive fatal dementia.
- Variant form may be related to bovine type
infection. - Spread by transfer of CNS tissue - corneal dura
mater grafts, neurosurgical instruments.
66HERPETIC WHITLOW
- Herpes virus the same as a cold sore.
- Occurs in persons working in the mouth such as
nurses, dentists etc. - Caused by the inoculation of the virus into the
skin through a puncture wound, scratch or minor
wound. - Lesion keeps recurring similar to a lip cold sore.
67Herpetic Whitlow
68SHOULD BE DISCARDED WHEN ¾ FULL
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73EPIDEMICS
- Outbreaks of diseases with a considerable
mortality rate occur - SARS, Influenza,
Hemorrhagic Fevers etc. - In some instances the death rate may be very high
and represent unusual risks to embalmers and
funeral directors. - A plan should be in place developed with Public
Health Authorities
74SUMMARY
- Always use proper protective gear and procedures.
- Keep immunizations up to date.
- Follow disinfection and sterilization procedures
correctly. - Control the prep room traffic activities.
- Consider infection prevention in designing and
renovating facilities.