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This session covers the principles of infection control, recognizing gaps in infection control infrastructure, and proper selection and use of personal protective equipment (PPE). It also discusses disease transmission, infection control precautions, and the use of PPE in healthcare facilities and the community.
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Principles of Infection Control and Personal Protective Equipment May, 2007
Learning Objectives • Demonstrate knowledge of the principles of infection control • Recognize gaps in infection control infrastructure • Recognize ways to address gaps in infection control infrastructure in different situations • Demonstrate proper selection and use of personal protective equipment
Session Overview • Disease transmission • Introduction to personal protective equipment (PPE) • How to use PPE • Demonstration • Infection control precautions • In health care facilities • In the community
Route of transmission Port Quantity of pathogen Virulence Chain of Infection + Sensitive host
Routes of Transmission • Respiratory • Cough • Sneeze • Fecal-oral • Feces contaminate food, environment, or hands • Vector-borne • Transmitted by insects
Direct Contact Host comes into contact with reservoir Kissing, skin-to-skin contact, sexual intercourse Contact with soil or vegetation Indirect Contact Disease is carried from reservoir to host Contaminated surfaces (fomites) Routes of TransmissionContact Examples:
Routes of TransmissionDroplet Large droplets within ~1 meter (3 feet) transmit infection via: • Coughing, sneezing, talking • Medical procedures Examples: • Diphtheria • Pertussis (Whooping Cough) • Meningococcal meningitis
Routes of TransmissionAirborne (droplet nuclei) Very small particles of evaporated droplets or dust with infectious agent may… • Remain in air for a long time • Travel farther than droplets • Become aerosolized during procedures Examples: • Tuberculosis • Measles (Rubeola)
Hand Washing Method • Wet hands with clean (not hot) water • Apply soap • Rub hands together for about 20 seconds • Rinse with clean water • Dry with disposable towel or air dry • Use towel to turn off faucet
Alcohol-based Hand Rubs • Effective if hands not visibly soiled • More costly than soap & water Method • Apply appropriate (3ml) amount to palms • Rub hands together, covering all surfaces until dry
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) • When used properly can protect you from exposure to infectious agents • Know what type of PPE is necessary for the duties you perform and use it correctly
Types of PPE • Gloves • Gowns • Masks • Boots (for agricultural settings, not used for human healthcare) • Eye protection
Types of PPE Gloves • Different kinds of gloves • Housekeeper gloves • Clean gloves • Sterile glove • Work from clean to dirty • Avoid “touch contamination” • Eyes, mouth, nose, surfaces • Change gloves between patients
Types of PPE Gowns • Fully cover torso • Have long sleeves • Fit snuggly at the wrist
Types of PPE Masks and Respirators: Barriers and Filtration • Surgical masks • Cotton, paper • Protect against body fluids and large particles • Particulate respirators (N95) • Fit testing essential • Protect against small droplets and other airborne particles • Alternative materials (barrier) • Tissues, cloth
Types of PPE Particulate Respirators • Three types: disposable, reusable, powered air purifying respirators • Disposable Particulate Respirators • Classified N95, N99, N100, R95, R99, R100, P95, P99, P100 • Letter indicates oil resistance: N = not resistant, R = somewhat resistant, P = strongly resistant • Number is percent of airborne particles filtered (e.g. N95 filters 95% of particles)
Types of PPE Boots (non-hospital settings) Eye Protection • Face shields • Goggles
PPE Supplies • Maintain adequate, accessible supplies • Creative alternatives (studies not done to asses effectiveness) • Mask: tissue, scarf • Gown: laboratory coat, scrubs
Working with Limited Resources • Avoid reuse of disposable PPE items • Consider reuse of some disposable items only as an urgent, temporary solution • Reuse only if no obvious soiling or damage • When prioritizing PPE purchase • Masks • Gloves • Eye protection
Precaution Levels All levels require hand hygiene • Standard Transmission based precautions: • Contact • Droplet • Airborne
Standard Precautions • Prevent the transmission of common infectious agents • Hand washing key • Assume infectious agent could be present in the patient’s • Blood • Body fluids, secretions, excretions • Non-intact skin • Mucous membranes
PPE for Standard Precautions Wear: • Gloves • Gowns • Eye Protection and / or Mask If: • Touching • Respiratory secretions • Contaminated items or surfaces • Blood & body fluids • Soiling clothes with patient body fluids, secretions, or excretions • Procedures are likely to generate splashes / sprays of blood, body fluids, secretions, excretions
Contact Precautions Taken in addition to Standard Precautions • Limit patient movement • Isolate or cohort patients • Gown + gloves for patient / room contact • Remove immediately after contact • Do not touch eyes, nose, mouth with hands • Avoid contaminating environmental surfaces
Contact Precautions • Wash hands immediately after patient contact • Use dedicated equipment if possible • If not, clean and disinfect between uses • Clean, then disinfect patient room daily • Bed rails • Bedside tables • Lavatory surfaces • Blood pressure cuff, equipment surfaces
Cleaning and Disinfection for Contact Precautions • Detergents • Remove dirt, soiling • Mechanical force essential • Flush with clean water • Disinfectants • Kill viruses, bacteria • Decontaminate surfaces • Type depends on infectious agent • Use after detergent
Droplet Precautions • Prevent infection by large droplets from • Sneezing • Coughing • Talking • Examples • Neisseria meningitidis • Pertussis • Seasonal influenza
Droplet Precautions Taken in addition to Standard Precautions • Place patients in single rooms or cohort 3 feet apart • Wear surgical mask within 3 feet or 1 meter of patient • Wear face shield or goggles within 3 feet or 1 meter of patient • Limit patient movement within facility • Patient wears mask when outside of room
Airborne Precautions Taken in addition to Standard Precautions • Prevent spread of infection through inhalable airborne particles • Examples • Tuberculosis • Measles • Varicella • Variola
Airborne Precautions • Use for confirmed or suspected avian influenza cases
Airborne Precautions for Avian Influenza • N95 respirator (or equivalent) for personnel • Check seal with each use • Patient in isolation • Airborne isolation room, if available • Air exhaust to outside or re-circulated with HEPA filtration • Patient to wear a surgical mask if outside of the isolation room
Aerosol-generating Procedures (Example; Endotracheal intubation) • N95 particulate respirator • If not available, wear tight fitting surgical mask and face shield • Eye protection • Gloves and hand washing • Gown and waterproof apron • Isolation room with negative pressure, if available • Hair cover optional
Avian Influenza • Currently not easily transmitted human to human • Routes of transmission to humans not known, cannot rule-out any routes • Current transmission from poultry to human or human to human for H5N1 requires very close contact
Interviewing - Asymptomatic Exposed Persons and Contacts • Low-risk activity • Routine use of PPE not recommended • Maintain 3 feet distance between interviewer and interviewee • Use proper hand hygiene • May use hand sanitizer (at least 60% alcohol) if hands not visibly soiled
Interviewing - Symptomatic Exposed Persons • Higher risk activity • PPE recommended in community and healthcare facility • Contact precautions • Droplet precautions • N95 respirator • In healthcare facility, person should be placed in airborne isolation room • Maintain a distance > 3 feet if possible
Specimen Collection – Exposed Persons and Birds • High-risk aerosol-generating procedure • PPE recommended • Gloves • Gown • Goggles or face-shield • N95 or better respirator
Influenza Transmission Effective Infection Control Prevents Transmission From ... • Patients to health care workers • Patients to patients • Patients to family members providing care
Avian Influenza Precautions Standard precautions Droplet precautions Airborne Precautions
Precautions for Suspected or Confirmed Cases of Influenza A (H5N1) • Place patient in a negative air pressure room • To create a negative air pressure room: • Install exhaust fan and direct air from inside to an outside area where no people are located • Place patients in rooms alone • Alternative: cohort patients away from other patient care areas with beds > 3 feet apart • Avoid placement in rooms with stagnant air and poor airflow/ventilation
Precautions for Suspected or Confirmed Cases of Influenza A (H5N1) • Limit number of health care workers, family members and visitors • Designate experienced staff to provide care • Limit designated staff to avian influenza patient care • Teach family and visitors to use PPE
Precautions for Suspected or Confirmed Cases of Influenza A (H5N1) • Keep isolated from others as much as possible until: • At least 7 days after symptom onset AND • At least 48 hours after fever has subsided without taking fever-reducing medicines (Whichever is longer) • Depending on the specific circumstances suspect or confirmed cases that have completed isolation for at least 7 days,and who are no longer symptomatic, may not be considered a source of exposure to others.
Precautions for Collecting Specimens • Notify laboratory in advance • Health care worker collecting specimen should wear full barrier PPE • Place specimen in leak-proof bag • Hand deliver, if possible • Label specimen clearly as “suspected avian influenza”
Precautions for Suspected or Confirmed Cases Patient Infection Control Precaution Acute influenza symptom + travel to AI country in 10 days Surgical mask for patient, use respiratory hygiene Isolation room, use of PPE Apply all infection control precautions Test for influenza A/H5 Re-evaluate the precaution measures Different diagnosis Confirmed Influenza A/H5 Maintain required infection control precautions • Adults and adolescents > 12 years: Continue for 10 days after resolution of fever unless case is ruled-out through confirmatory laboratory methods