Nosocomial Infections (Hospital
Acquired Infections)
·
Infections that
are acquired in the hospital or other health care facility that was not present
or incubating at the time of a client's admission.
Transmission of infectious agent within a
healthcare setting requires three elements:
1.
A source of
infectious agent
2.
A susceptible host
with a portal of entry receptive to agent
3.
A mode of
transmission for the agent
Standard Precautions:
Hand Washing
· The single most important practice to reduce the
transmission of infectious agents in health care settings.
· Wash hands after touching blood, body fluids,
secretions, excretions and contaminated items, whether or not gloves are worn.
· Wash hands immediately after removing gloves, between
patient contacts, and when otherwise indicated to reduce transmission of
microorganisms.
· Wash hands between tasks and procedures on the same
patient to prevent cross-contamination of different body sites.
· Use plain nonantimicrobial soaps for routine
handwashing.
· An antimicrobial agent or waterless antiseptic agent
may be used for specific circumstances (hyperendemic infections) as defined by
infection control.
Gloves
·
Is indicated when:
o Anticipating direct contact with blood or body fluids,
mucous membranes, nonintact skin and other potentially infectious material
o Having direct contact with patients who are colonized
or infected with pathogens transmitted by the contact route e.g., VRE, MRSA,
RSV 559
o Handling or touching visibly or potentially contaminated
patient care equipment and environmental surfaces
Gown
· When applying Standard Precautions, an isolation gown
is worn only if contact with blood or body fluid is anticipated.
Masks
· Are used for
three primary purposes in healthcare settings:
o Placed on healthcare personnel to protect them from
contact with infectious material from patients e.g., respiratory secretions and
sprays of blood or body fluids, consistent with Standard Precautions and
Droplet Precautions
o Placed on healthcare personnel when engaged in
procedures requiring sterile technique to protect patients from exposure to
infectious agents carried in a healthcare worker’s mouth or nose.
o Placed on coughing patients to limit potential
dissemination of infectious respiratory secretions from the patient to others
(i.e., Respiratory Hygiene/Cough Etiquette).
Masks should not be confused with
particulate respirators that are used to prevent inhalation of small particles
that may contain infectious agents transmitted via the airborne route.
Goggles / Face Shields
·
Should be worn if
patient care activities may generate splashes or sprays of blood, body fluids,
secretions and excretions.
Patient-Care Equipment
· Handle used patient-care equipment soiled with blood,
body fluids, secretions, and excretions in a manner that prevents skin and
mucous membrane exposures, contamination of clothing and transfer of
microorganisms to other patients or environment.
Environmental Control
· Follow hospital procedures for the routine care,
cleaning and disinfection of environmental surfaces, beds, bedrails, bedside
equipment, and other frequently touched surfaces.
Occupational Health & Blood-Borne
Pathogens
· Never recap used needles, or otherwise manipulate them
using both hands, or use any other technique that involves directing the point
of the needle toward any part of the body; rather, use either a one-handed
"scoop" technique or a mechanical device designed for holding the
needle sheath.
· Do not remove used needles from disposable syringes by
hand, and do not bend, break, or otherwise manipulate used needles by hand.
· Use mouthpieces, resuscitation bags, or other
ventilation devices as an alternative to mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
. Modes of Transmission .
. Transmission-Based Precautions .
Contact Transmission - most common mode of transmission
Direct Contract Transmission
·
Occurs when
microorganisms transferred from infected person to another person without a
contaminated intermediate object or person.
Indirect Contact Transmission
·
Involves the
transfer of an infectious agent through a contaminated intermediate object or
person.
Examples of common pathogens that are
transmitted via contact transmission:
o
Clostridium
difficile
o
Herpex Simplex
Virus
o
Respiratory
Syncytial Virus
o
Staphylococcus
Aureus
o
Multi-Drug
Resistant Organisms e.g Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)
o
Sarcoptes
scabiei var hominis (scabies), & other
skin infections
o
Bacillus anthracis
("Anthrax"). [or inhaled]
o
Clostridium
botulinum
C. difficile - a spore-forming gram positive anaerobic bacillus that
is the major cause of healthcare-associated diarrhea.
Control of Multi-Drug Resistant Organism
(MDRO)
1.
Administrative
support (e.g adherence to infection control guidelines)
2.
Judicious use of
antimicrobials
3.
Surveillance
(routine and enhanced)
4.
Standard and
Contact Precautions
5.
Environmental
measures
6.
Education
7.
Decolonization
Examples of MDRO: Methycillin Resistant Staphyloccus Aureus [MRSA],
vancomycin resistant enterococcus [VRE]
Contact Precautions:
§ Isolation room.
§ Wear gloves when in contact with the patient or when
entering the room.
§ Wear gown when entering the room when you anticipate
your clothing will have substantial contact with the patient, environmental
surfaces or if the patient is incontinent or has any drainage that is not
contained by dressing.
§ After glove and gown removal and handwashing, ensure
that hands do not touch contaminated environment items.
§ Limit movement and transport of patient.
Droplet
Transmission
·
Is a form of
contact transmission in which respiratory droplets carrying infectious
pathogens transmit infection when they travel directly from the respiratory
tract of the infectious individual, through coughing, sneezing, talking or
during endotracheal intubation, to susceptible mucosal surfaces of the recipient.
·
It may be prudent
to don a mask when within 6 to 10 feet (> 3 feet) of the patient or upon
entry into the patient's room, especially when exposure to emerging or highly
virulent pathogens is likely.
Examples of infectious agent that travel
via the droplet route:
o
Bordetella
pertussis
o
Influenza virus
o
Adenovirus
o
Rhinovirus
o
Mycoplasma
pneumoniae
o
SARS-asscoaited
coronavirus
o
Group A
streptococcus
o
Neisseria
meningitidis
Droplet Precautions:
§ Isolation room
§ Wear mask when entering room
§ Limit movement and transport of patient to essential
purposes only
§ Mask patient when transporting out of area
Airborne
Transmission
·
Occurs by
dissemination of either airborne droplet nucei or small particles in the
respirable size range containing infectious agent that remain infective over
time and long distances.
Example:
o
Spores of
Aspergillus spp
o
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis
o
Rubeola virus
(measles)
o
Varicella-zoster
virus (chickenpox)
o
Variola virus
(smallpox)
Airborne Precautions:
·
Patient must be
placed in Airborne Infection Isolation Rooms (AIIRs). Room under negative
pressure.
·
Nurse must use
wear respiratory protection when entering AIIRs (e.g N95 respirator,
NIOSH-approved Particulate Respirator
"air purifying respirators")
·
Limit movement and
transport of patient to essential purposes only.
·
Mask patient when
transporting out of area.
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