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Infection Control for the Safety Monitor

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Title: Infection Control for the Safety Monitor


1
Infection Control for the Safety Monitor
  • Anne Lawrence
  • Nov, 2006

2
Role of the Safety Monitor as a Team Member
  • Objectives
  • 1. Understand the concept of quality as it
    relates to health care.
  • 2. Understand how each department works together
    to provide quality care.
  • 3. Discuss how attitude is important to the work
    environment.
  • 4. Discuss the impact of attitude on personal
    health, safety and productivity.

3
Quality Care
  • Whos Job is it?
  • - any and all health care workers.
  • Why?
  • - it is important to patients and residents.
  • - important to families and communities.
  • - we promise as an organization.
  • - we are the organization / team that provide
    the care.

4
Why is your attitude so important?
  • Because .
  • it affects how you look,
  • what you says and
  • what you do

5
Attitude
  • it affects how you feel both
  • physically and mentally.
  • And
  • it largely affects how successful you are
    in achieving your purpose in life.
  • WHAT COULD BE
  • MORE IMPORTANT?

6
What About You?
  • Is the Glass half full or half empty?

7
Attitude
  • a POSITIVE Attitude
  • makes everyday life
    Better!
  • LIFE more meaningful!
  • PROBLEMS easier to handle!
  • GOALS more attainable!
  • MISTAKES less disastrous!
  • the FUTURE more exciting!

8
Attitude
  • SO
  • The Quality of your life depend on YOUR attitude
    towards yourself and others
  • which only YOU can change.
  • Start practicing POSITIVE THINKING
  • to create a POSITIVE
    ATTIUDE
  • RIGHT NOW.


9
Infection Control and Employee Health
10
Infection Control/Employee Health
  • Objectives
  • - Have a basic understanding of the role of
    Infection Control/ Staff Health
  • - Understand the importance of a healthy
    lifestyle and good personal hygiene.
  • - Understand the importance of reporting
    occupational injuries.

11
Infection Control
  • What does this mean?
  • Any Ideas?

12
Infection Control
  • Preventing illnesses acquired at a
  • health care facility.
  • Hospital acquired infections are known as
    nosocomial infections.
  • examples urinary tract infections, surgical
    infections, respiratory infections, foodbourne
    illness, hepatitis and AIDS.

13
Why is Infection Control Important
  • It is vital to the patients well being, and
    yours, too.
  • Infections can lengthen the hospital stay,
    cause inconvenience, loss of income, pain and
    even death.

14
Who Is Responsible?
  • Who do you think?
  • - the Infection Control department?
  • - doctors?
  • - nurses?
  • - administration?
  • - anyone else?

15
Infection Control
  • Involves consultation teaching staff re
    isolation and care of infected patients.
  • Involves monitoring of patients and staff for
    infectious or contagious diseases. Infections may
    be transmitted from employee to patient or
    from patient to employee

16
Focus of IC
  • Education
  • teachings re disease process and prevention.
  • policy development.
  • Surveillance
  • data collection.
  • Control measures
  • cleanliness of environment.
  • waste management
  • proper use cleaning of
  • equipment.

17
Staff Health
  • Starts with being healthy.
  • Prevention of disease in staff
  • On orientation health assessment
  • - immunization record
  • - blood work for
    immune
  • status
  • (measles, rubella,
    varicella)


  • - Health Record

18
Immunization
  • Tetanus/Diptheria
  • Hepatitis
  • Rubella vaccine if not immune
  • Varicella vaccine if not immune
  • Influenza vaccine
  • PPD (Tuberculine Testing)

19
Job Related Illnesses
  • Infectious Contacts
  • Exposure to
  • Tuberculosis skin testing/ CXR/ 3 month
    follow up.
  • Chicken Pox varicella titre if non
    reactive off work from day 10-21 post
  • exposure.

20
Job Related Illnesses
  • Exposure to Blood and/or Body Fluids
  • Hepatitis B - 6 - 30
  • Hepatitis C - 0.5 - 10
  • HIV - 0.1 - 0.3

21
Work Restrictions
  • Diarrhea individual assessment
  • - may be excluded from pt care
  • - food service workers no
    food
  • handling until symptoms
    resolve.
  • Influenza during communicable period,
  • employees may be excluded
  • from direct patient care.

22
Work Restrictions
  • Herpes Simplex individual assessment.
  • May be excluded
    from
  • direct patient
    care.
  • Conjunctivitis draining sore eyes. Employee
    maybe excluded from direct pt care.
  • Sore hands individual assessment.

23
Health Record
  • Confidential
  • All information collected in one file
  • Updated
  • Copies available

24
Staff Health and Safety
  • NO SCENTS IS GOOD SENSE
  • Please do not wear perfumes or any scented
  • products to work. Scented products contain
  • chemicals which can cause serious problems
  • for many people with lung disease allergies.

25
Employee Health
  • No clinic available
  • report to ext. 5297 if you are at work and
    sick.
  • If you have vomiting and/or diarrhea.
  • If you have open sores.
  • If you have possibly been in contact with a
    communicable disease.

26
Reporting Incidents
  • All accidents, injuries or near misses should be
    reported ASAP.
  • Complete the form.
  • Notify your manager.
  • Notify staff health if there has been an exposure
    to blood or body fluids.

27
The Chain of Infection
28
Objectives
  • Describe the chain of infection.
  • Have a basic knowledge of microbiology.
  • Explain the factors that allow microorganisms to
    grow and how to eliminate or control these
    factors.

29
The Chain of InfectionDefinitions
  • Infection process by which a susceptible host
    (person) is invaded by a pathogenic (or
    infectious) agent that grows and causes harm.
  • Types localized, primary, secondary, mixed,
    cross droplet, airbourne, generalized.
  • Others waterbourne, foodbourne, terminal and
    septic.

30
Definitions cont
  • Antibodies a protein that is produced in the
    body in response to invasion by a foreign agent
    (antigen) and that reacts specifically with it.
  • Inflammation tissue response to injury or
    destruction of the cells. (Injury or infection)

31
Definitions cont
  • Bacteria can be harmful or helpful.
  • - Comes in a variety of shapes.
  • - Reproduce every 20 minutes.
  • Virus - smaller than bacteria.
  • - parasitic in nature.
  • - can remain inactive for long periods of time
  • Fungi vegetable organism (classed with
    mushrooms and mold)

32
What allows microorganisms to grow and cause
infections?
  • The microorganism must enter the body.
  • There must be sufficient numbers to cause a
    disease.
  • Must be capable of destroying healthy tissue.
  • The host must not have immunity to the disease.
  • The route of transmission is appropriate.

33
Chain of
Infection
Infectious Agent
Reservoir
Susceptible Host
Portal of Entry
Portal of Exit
Mode of Transmission
34
Standard Precautions Transmission Based
Precautions
35
Objectives
  • Understand the importance of isolation
    precautions in the health care setting.
  • Understand the importance of wearing PPE.
  • Understand how to properly don and remove PPE.

36
Hospital-based Infections
  • Each year nearly 200,000 patients in Canada get
    an infection while hospitalized.
  • Of these patients, about 8,000 will die as a
    result of their infection!
  • Estimated cost - 1 billion a year.

Community and Hospital Infection Control
Association of Canada
37
Transmission of infection within a hospital
requires three elements
  • Source
  • Host
  • Transmission

38
Source
  • Patients
  • Personnel
  • Visitors
  • Incubation period of a disease
  • Colonized by an infectious agent
  • Chronic carriers of an infectious agent

39
Other sources
  • Patients own endogenous flora
  • Inanimate environmental objects (ie., equipment
    and medications)

40
Host
  • Resistance to pathogenic micro- organisms
  • gt age
  • gt underlying diseases
  • gt certain treatments
  • gt breaks in first line of defense

41
Standard Precautions
  • Prevents the spread of microorganisms.
  • Applies to ALL patients.
  • Transmission based precautions are added if
    needed.
  • Reduces the spread of infection within the
    hospital setting.

42
Applies to
  • Blood
  • All body fluids except perspiration
  • Non-intact skin
  • Mucous membranes

If it is wet and sticky and not yours DO NOT
touch it without gloves!
43
Do it right every time!
  • You wont have to question yourself when a
    patient is diagnosed as infectious!

44
Transmission Based Precautions
  • Designed for patients infected with highly
    transmissible diseases or pathogens.
  • Additional precautions beyond Standard
    Precautions are needed to interrupt transmission
    in hospitals.
  • Used either singularly or in combination, but
    always with Standard Precautions.

45
Transmission
  • Five main routes of transmission
  • gt Contact
  • gt Droplet
  • gt Airborne
  • gt Common vehicle
  • gt Vectorborne
  • These routes do not usually play a significant
    role in typical nosocomial infection.

46
Mode of Transmission
  • In medical care facilities, hands are the major
    instrument for the transmission of most bacteria.

47
Hand-washing
  • In health care, nurses and doctors wash only 30
    of the required time between patient contacts and
    procedures!

48
Trivia Time!!!
  • How may people stop to wash their hands after
    using the washroom?

1 in 3!!!
49
More Trivia!!!
  • How many diseases can be spread by not washing
    your hands?

Over 200!!!
50
Prevention of Infection
  • Hand washing
  • Use plain soap and water.
  • Alcohol hand wash is 99.9 effective (wash with
    soap and water if hands are visibly soiled).

51
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52
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53
Handwashing
Happy Birthday
54
Contact Transmission
  • Involves skin-to-skin contact and physical
    transfer of microorganisms to a susceptible host
    from an infected or colonized person.
  • Indirect contact transmission involves contact
    with a contaminated object i.e., a side-rail or
    light switch in the patients environment.

55
Examples of diseases
  • Gastrointestinal infections (Norwalk Virus)
  • Scabies
  • Clostridium difficile
  • Multi-resistant organisms (MRSA/VRE)

56
Important points
  • Bring only the supplies you need into the room.
  • Always wear a gown and gloves.
  • Remove personal protective equipment immediately
    when finished.
  • Wash hands.

57
Just because you cant see it, doesnt mean that
it isnt there!
58
Droplet Transmission
  • Involves contact of the eyes or mucous membranes
    of the nose and mouth of a susceptible person
    from a person who has the disease or who is a
    carrier.
  • Droplets are generated primarily during coughing
    or sneezing.
  • Requires close contact since droplets travel only
    short distances, 3 feet or less.

59
Examples of diseases
  • Meningitis
  • Influenza

60
Meningococcal Disease
  • Caused by a bacteria
  • Spread by close contact
  • Droplet Precautions
  • Chemoprophylaxis
  • Treatment

61
Important Points
  • The door can be open.
  • Always wear a mask (when working within 3 feet of
    the patient), gown, and gloves.
  • Remove personal protective equipment immediately
    when finished.
  • Wash hands.

62
Airborne Transmission
  • Occurs by spread of airborne droplets or dust
    particles containing the infectious agent.
  • Organisms can be widely spread and may become
    inhaled by or deposited on a susceptible host in
    the same room.

63
Examples of diseases
  • Tuberculosis
  • Varicella (Chicken Pox)
  • SARS

64
Did I Mention Hand-washing???
65
Hand washing
  • Good hand hygiene is still the easiest, cheapest,
    and best way to protect everyones health!

66
Questions?
67
Guidance for the Selection and Use of Personal
Protective Equipment (PPE) in Healthcare Settings
68
PPE Use in Healthcare SettingsProgram Goal
  • Improve personnel safety in the healthcare
    environment through appropriate use of PPE.

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
69
Personal Protective Equipment Definition
specialized clothing or equipment worn by an
employee for protection against infectious
materials (OSHA)
PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
70
Types of PPE Used in Healthcare Settings
  • Gloves protect hands
  • Gowns/aprons protect skin and/or clothing
  • Masks and respirators protect mouth/nose
  • Respirators protect respiratory tract from
    airborne infectious agents
  • Goggles protect eyes
  • Face shields protect face, mouth, nose, and eyes

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
71
Factors Influencing PPE Selection
  • Type of exposure anticipated
  • Splash/spray versus touch
  • Category of isolation precautions
  • Durability and appropriateness for the task
  • Fit

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
72
Gloves
  • Purpose patient care, environmental services,
    other
  • Glove material vinyl, latex, nitrile, other
  • Sterile or nonsterile
  • One or two pair
  • Single use or reusable

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
73
Gloves
  • Purpose patient care, environmental services,
    other
  • Glove material vinyl, latex, nitrile, other
  • Sterile or non-sterile
  • One or two pair
  • Single use or reusable

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
74
Dos and Donts of Glove Use
  • Work from clean to dirty
  • Limit opportunities for touch contamination -
    protect yourself, others, and the environment
  • Dont touch your face or adjust PPE with
    contaminated gloves
  • Dont touch environmental surfaces except as
    necessary during patient care

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
75
Dos and Donts of Glove Use (contd)
  • Change gloves
  • During use if torn and when heavily soiled (even
    during use on the same patient)
  • After use on each patient
  • Discard in appropriate receptacle
  • Never wash or reuse disposable gloves

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
76
Gowns or Aprons
  • Purpose of use
  • Material
  • Natural or man-made
  • Reusable or disposable
  • Resistance to fluid penetration
  • Clean or sterile

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
77
Face Protection
  • Masks protect nose and mouth
  • Should fully cover nose and mouth and prevent
    fluid penetration
  • Goggles protect eyes
  • Should fit snuggly over and around eyes
  • Personal glasses not a substitute for goggles
  • Antifog feature improves clarity

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
78
Face Protection
  • Face shields protect face, nose, mouth, and
    eyes
  • Should cover forehead, extend below chin and wrap
    around side of face

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
79
PPE Use in Healthcare SettingsHow to Safely
Don, Use, and Remove PPE
80
Key Points About PPE
  • Don before contact with the patient, generally
    before entering the room
  • Use carefully dont spread contamination
  • Remove and discard carefully, either at the
    doorway or immediately outside patient room
    remove respirator outside room
  • Immediately perform hand hygiene

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
81
Sequence for Donning PPE
  • Gown first
  • Mask or respirator
  • Goggles or face shield
  • Gloves

Combination of PPE will affect sequence be
practical
PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
82
How to Don a Gown
  • Select appropriate type and size
  • Opening is in the back
  • Secure at neck and waist
  • If gown is too small, use two gowns
  • Gown 1 ties in front
  • Gown 2 ties in back

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
83
How to Don a Mask
  • Place over nose, mouth and chin
  • Fit flexible nose piece over nose bridge
  • Secure on head with ties or elastic
  • Adjust to fit

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
84
How to Don a Particulate Respirator
  • Select a fit tested respirator
  • Place over nose, mouth and chin
  • Fit flexible nose piece over nose bridge
  • Secure on head with elastic
  • Adjust to fit
  • Perform a fit check
  • Inhale respirator should collapse
  • Exhale check for leakage around face

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
85
How to Don Eye and Face Protection
  • Position goggles over eyes and secure to the head
    using the ear pieces or headband
  • Position face shield over face and secure on brow
    with headband
  • Adjust to fit comfortably

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
86
How to Don Gloves
  • Don gloves last
  • Select correct type and size
  • Insert hands into gloves
  • Extend gloves over isolation gown cuffs

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
87
How to Safely Use PPE
  • Keep gloved hands away from face
  • Avoid touching or adjusting other PPE
  • Remove gloves if they become torn perform hand
    hygiene before donning new gloves
  • Limit surfaces and items touched

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
88
PPE Use in Healthcare SettingsHow to Safely
Remove PPE
89
Contaminated and Clean Areas of PPE
  • Contaminated outside front
  • Areas of PPE that have or are likely to have been
    in contact with body sites, materials, or
    environmental surfaces where the infectious
    organism may reside
  • Clean inside, outside back, ties on head and
    back
  • Areas of PPE that are not likely to have been in
    contact with the infectious organism

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
90
Sequence for Removing PPE
  • Gloves
  • Face shield or goggles
  • Gown
  • Mask or respirator

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
91
Where to Remove PPE
  • At doorway, before leaving patient room or in
    anteroom
  • Remove respirator outside room, after door has
    been closed

Ensure that hand hygiene facilities are
available at the point needed, e.g., sink or
alcohol-based hand rub
PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
92
How to Remove Gloves (1)
  • Grasp outside edge near wrist
  • Peel away from hand, turning glove inside-out
  • Hold in opposite gloved hand

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
93
How to Remove Gloves (2)
  • Slide ungloved finger under the wrist of the
    remaining glove
  • Peel off from inside, creating a bag for both
    gloves
  • Discard

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
94
Remove Goggles or Face Shield
  • Grasp ear or head pieces with ungloved hands
  • Lift away from face
  • Place in designated receptacle for reprocessing
    or disposal

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
95
Removing Isolation Gown
  • Unfasten ties
  • Peel gown away from neck and shoulder
  • Turn contaminated outside toward the inside
  • Fold or roll into a bundle
  • Discard

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
96
Removing a Mask
  • Untie the bottom, then top, tie
  • Remove from face
  • Discard

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
97
Removing a Particulate Respirator
  • Lift the bottom elastic over your head first
  • Then lift off the top elastic
  • Discard

PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
98
Hand Hygiene
  • Perform hand hygiene immediately after removing
    PPE.
  • If hands become visibly contaminated during PPE
    removal, wash hands before continuing to remove
    PPE
  • Wash hands with soap and water or use an
    alcohol-based hand rub

Ensure that hand hygiene facilities are
available at the point needed, e.g., sink or
alcohol-based hand rub
PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
99
Hand Hygiene
  • Perform hand hygiene immediately after removing
    PPE.
  • If hands become visibly contaminated during PPE
    removal, wash hands before continuing to remove
    PPE
  • Wash hands with soap and water or use an
    alcohol-based hand rub

Ensure that hand hygiene facilities are
available at the point needed, e.g., sink or
alcohol-based hand rub
PPE Use in Healthcare Settings
100
Occupational Exposure
  • We will talk about
  • What is an exposure?
  • What to do if an exposure occurs.

101
Occupational Exposure
  • We will discuss
  • HIV/AIDS
  • Hepatitis B C
  • What they are.
  • How they are spread.

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