1 / 34

Safe and Effective Care: Safety and Infection Control

Safe and Effective Care: Safety and Infection Control. Ms. Tina Terpening. Accident and Injury Prevention. Identify client allergies Facilitate correct use infant/child car seats Rear facing till age 2, car seat /booster till age 8 (till 4’9”) Be aware of factors that contribute to risk

faith
Download Presentation

Safe and Effective Care: Safety and Infection Control

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Safe and Effective Care: Safety and Infection Control Ms. Tina Terpening

  2. Accident and Injury Prevention • Identify client allergies • Facilitate correct use infant/child car seats • Rear facing till age 2, car seat /booster till age 8 (till 4’9”) • Be aware of factors that contribute to risk • Altered mental status • Confusion • Age/knowledge level • Always verify client using 2 identifiers • Monitor environment for safety = be safety minded • Provide mechanism to signal staff • Always evaluate appropriateness of each order at this time for this patient

  3. Emergency Response Plan • Identify roles of personnel during internal and external disasters • Participate in preparation/planning • Contribute to selection of client(s) to discharge in disaster situation

  4. Preventing Injury and Infection • Accidents • LVN’s are legally accountable for prevention of accidental injury • Nosocomial Infections • Hospital acquired infection • Protect clients from other infections • GOOD HAND WASHING!!! • Incident reports • Necessary part of care • Used by safety committee • Never reference in client record

  5. Ergonomic Principles • Use assistive devices and lifts when possible • Ask for help when needed

  6. Working at Computer • Body should be in neutral aligned position • Hands, wrists, and forearms parallel to ground • Head should be level • Bend elbow 90-120 degrees and close to body • Back should be supported • Knees should be hip level • Adjust position at least every 15 minutes

  7. Body Mechanics • Face object being moved • Bend at legs-not back • Work using legs-not back • Turn pivoting body-do not twist • Have object being moved close to you and at waist level • Push instead of pull • Have wide base of support • Move object with smooth, even motion

  8. Body Mechanics (continued) • Keep beds or objects close at waist level • Do not lift if you can slide • Do not bend, reach or twist

  9. Repositioning Client in Bed • Raise bed to waist level • Lower side rails • Use slide boards or draw sheets • Kneel on bed if needed to maintain body mechanics • Use other staff members for health

  10. Transferring Bed to Chair or Chair to Bed • Put bed in low position • Position chair so client moving toward strong side • Position chair so client can stand and then pivot

  11. Chemical Agents and Radiation • Determine type and amount of radiation used • Place sign “Caution Radioactive Material” • Wear monitoring badge to record exposure • Dispose of items per facility protocol • Never handle radioactive material with hands

  12. Home Safety • Identify fire/environmental hazards (i.e. frayed cords, area rugs, etc.) • Provide client education on home safety • Home disposal of syringes • Lighting • Handrails • Kitchen safety

  13. Least Restrictive Restraints & Safety Devices • Demonstrate knowledge of appropriate application of restraints/safety devices • Know protocol for timed client monitoring (i.e. restraint, safety check, etc.) • Maintain documentation throughout the shift • Check proper function of restraint/safety device • Implement least restrictive restraints or seclusion

  14. Reporting Incident/Event • May be called Incident/Event/Irregular Occurrence/Variance • Completed for unusual or unexpected events • Acknowledge and document practice errors • Monitor and document client response to error

  15. Security Plan • Initiate and/or participate in all security alerts (i.e. infant abduction) • Use principles of triage and evacuation protocols/procedures prn

  16. Falls • Identify clients at risk (i.e. older adults, impaired mobility, cognitive/sensory impaired, bowel/bladder dysfunction, medication side effects, etc.) • Nursing interventions: • Complete fall risk assessment on admission and as needed • Clients should be closest to nurses station • Provide nonskid footwear • Avoid clutter • Maintain bed in low position • Orient client to surroundings, keep call light in reach • Answer call lights quickly • Provide adequate lighting • Keep assistive devices in reach

  17. Restraints: Not Convenience/Short-Staffing • Current standard = reduce need for restraints • Includes mechanical, chemical, physical devices • Nursing interventions: • Implement non-pharmacologic measures (i.e. distractions, frequent observation, diversion) • Apply correctly • Notify provider immediately when applied • Remove and reassess every 2 hours • Reassess for continued use • Document • Behavior that made restraints necessary • Other alternatives attempted and client response • Type and location of restraint with time applied • Frequency/type assessments

  18. Seizure Precautions • Monitor hx, frequency, presence of auras, sequence of events • Identify precipitating factors • Review medication hx • Place rescue equipment at bedside • Remove items that may cause injury • At seizure onset = position for safety and remain with client • Protect head • Pad side rails for safety • Do not put anything in mouth • Loosen clothing • Document timing, precipitating behaviors, description of event • Report to provider

  19. Fire • Know facility fire drill and evacuation plan • Keep emergency numbers by phone at all times • Know location fire alarms, extinguishers, exits, oxygen shut-off valves • Rescue-> protect and evacuate clients in immediate danger • Alarm-> activate alarm and report fire • Contain->close doors & windows • Extinguish-> use correct fire extinguisher to eliminate the fire

  20. Fire Extinguishers • Class A paper, wood, cloth, trash • Class B flammable, liquids, gases • Class C electrical fires • Review “Stop, Drop and Roll”

  21. Equipment Safety • Electrical equipment must be grounded • Do not overcrowd outlets • Equipment should only be used for its intended purpose • Disconnect before cleaning

  22. Medical Asepsis (clean technique) • Hand hygiene frequently • Use PPE as needed • Do not put items on the floor • Do not shake linens • Clean least soiled area first • Place moist items in plastic bag • Educate client/caregivers

  23. Surgical Asepsis (sterile technique) • Avoid coughing, sneezing, talking over field • Only dry sterile items touch sterile field • 1” border non-sterile • Keep all objects above waist • Don sterile gloves to perform procedure

  24. Isolation Procedures • Standard precautions • Handwashing • Gloves • Mask • Eye protection • Face shield • Gown equipment • Environmental control • Linen • If it’s wet and it’s not yours….protect yourself!

  25. Standard Precautions • Report communicable diseases • Room placement for client safety • Clean equipment according to policy • Do not recap • Use sharps container • Clean spills with 1:10 bleach solution

  26. Droplet Precautions • Large particle • Required: gloves, mask, client placement • Organisms • H. influenza • Diphtheria • Pertussis • Scarlet fever • Adenovirus • Mumps • Streptococcal pharyngitis • Meningococcal pneumonia/sepsis • Pneumonic plague

  27. Airborne Precautions • Small particle • Issues: client placement negative airflow, respiratory protection (N-95), client transport, gloves • Organisms • Measles • Varicella • Tuberculosis (TB)

  28. Contact Precautions • Issues: client placement, gloves, handwashing, gown, client transport, equipment, mask and goggles as needed • Organisms • Enteric E. Coli • Skin herpes • Pediculosis • Scabies • Herpes simplex

  29. Protective Isolation • Standard precautions • Maximum protection may include sterile linens, food, other supplies • Minimize exposure to microorganisms • No flowers, fruits, vegetables brought in • Sterile gloves, gown, mask, protective room

  30. Order of Application PPE Application PPE Removal Gloves Goggles/face shield Gown mask • Gown • Mask • Goggles/face shield • Gloves

  31. Organisms to Know • AIDS/HIV • Chickenpox • Clostridium difficile • Hepatitis A, B, C • Herpes simplex (oral, skin, genital) • Herpes zoster • Measles • Meningococcal disease • Methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) • Pneumonia • RSV (Respiratory syncytial) • Rotavirus • Rubella • Salmonella • Shigellosis • Staphylococcus • Tuberculosis • Vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE)

  32. Frequent hand hygiene • Dispose of PPE inside client’s room • Monitor psychosocial needs in isolation • Only transport out of room when necessary • Avoid putting clients on contact precautions with clients who are immunocompromised, have open wounds, or have anticipated prolonged length of stay • Ensure clients > 3 ft apart from each other • Change PPE and perform hand hygiene between contact with clients in the same room

  33. Question: • An LVN is assisting in planning a community bicycle safety program. Which of the following information should the nurse recommend including? • Demonstrating the correct way to wear a bicycle helmet to parents of preschoolers • Asking school-aged children who have been involved in bicycle accidents to speak to their peers • Informing parents that it is necessary for all children to have a complete physical examination prior to initiating bike riding. • Telling parents that it is safest for children to ride bikes on weekends

  34. Questions?

More Related