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Personal Protective Equipment Session 5. Infection Control for LPHA Train the Trainer Course August 25, 2005 . Understand the principles of using PPE Be familiar with federal regulations related to PPE use
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Personal Protective EquipmentSession 5 Infection Control for LPHA Train the Trainer Course August 25, 2005
Understand the principles of using PPE Be familiar with federal regulations related to PPE use Be able to select the appropriate PPE to reduce risk of communicable disease transmission Objectives
PPEPrinciples • used as last resort when exposure cannot be eliminated by engineering controls or work practices • must use for all exposures • can opt out if it interferes with health care or public safety services • use is not dependent on length or frequency of exposure
Agent ↓ Reservoir ↓ Portal of exit ↓ Mode of transmission ↓ Portal of entry ↓ Susceptible host Chain of Infection
PPEPrinciples When selecting PPE, consider: • areas that need protection • eyes, nose, mouth • hands, skin, clothing • respiratory tract • tasks, procedures performed • generation of splashes, sprays • proximity to patient/client
PPEFederal Regulations29 CFR 1910.1030 • Employer must: • supply appropriate PPE • ensure employees use PPE • ensure PPE is readily available in needed sizes • clean, launder, repair, dispose of PPE • provide initial and annual training
PPEFederal Regulations 29 CFR 1910.132 • Employee must: • demonstrate ability to properly use • use it appropriately
PPE Standard precautions Protect mucous membranes of eyes, nose, and mouth when anticipating splashes/sprays of blood or body fluids to the face. • surgical masks and goggles • procedural masks
PPE Standard precautions • Considerations: • eye protection must have side shields • masks need to be fluid resistant • withstand pressure of at least 160mm/Hg • available with ear loops or ties • if deemed necessary to protect one area of face, all areas must be protected (eyes, nose, mouth)
PPE Standard precautions • Protect skin and prevent soiling of clothing when anticipating splashes/sprays to the body. • clean, non-sterile gowns (cloth or disposable) • aprons • lab coats • coveralls
PPE Standard precautions • Considerations: • select gown appropriate for activity and amount of fluid likely to be encountered • fluid resistant vs. impervious
PPE Standard precautions • Protect hands when touching blood, body fluids, urine, feces, specimens, contaminated items • clean, nonsterile (non-latex) gloves
PPE Standard precautions • Considerations: • must wear gloves for phlebotomy • gloves are put on just before touching • blood • body fluids • mucous membranes • non-intact skin • change between clients • change between tasks on same person if task creates heavy contamination
PPE Standard precautions • Considerations: • change if they become torn • remove gloves promptly after use, before touching non-contaminated items • wash hands immediately after removing gloves • never wash gloved hands
PPE Standard precautions Other PPE such as caps, shoe covers, boots are needed only if gross contamination is expected.
PPE Contact precautions In addition to practicing standard precautions, wear gown and gloves when in contact with • infected person • infected person’s environment • contaminated items and surfaces • persons who are incontinent or who have uncontrolled wound drainage or diarrhea
PPE Droplet precautions In addition to practicing standard precautions, wear a surgical or procedural mask when • within 3 feet of the infected person, OR • have the infected person wear a mask when in contact with other persons, if possible
PPE Airborne precautions In addition to practicing standard precautions, wear a NIOSH certified, fit-tested N-95 respirator when entering area where air is shared with infected person.
PPE Airborne precautions • Do not enter premises of infected person if not fit tested. • Staff susceptible to measles or chickenpox should not have contact with infected persons. • Persons with known immunity to measles and chickenpox do not need to wear respirators. • Infected person should wear a surgical mask when outside of isolation.
PPERemoval and Disposal • Remove immediately after use, before contaminating clean items and surfaces. • Remove before leaving exam room, or remove away from person’s immediate environment if on home visit.
PPE Removal and Disposal • Wash hands immediately after removal and disposal. • PPE may be discarded in regular trash unless saturated with blood or body fluids. • place saturated PPE in biohazard bag • home visit disposal: place PPE in plastic bag before discarding in regular trash
PPE Removal and Disposal N-95 respirators must not be removed until outside the area of shared air. Place in regular trash unless saturated with blood, body fluids.
References • Siegel et al. CDC HICPAC, “Guidelines for Isolation Precautions: Preventing Transmission of Infectious Agents in Healthcare Settings, 2007.” http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dhqp/pdf/guidelines/Isolation2007.pdf • OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard, 29 CFR 1910.1030 • http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/bloodbornepathogens/index.html • Personal Protective Equipment Education, APIC, August, 2005 • www.apic.org
Infection Control Principles and Practices Gwen Borlaug, CIC, MPH Infection Control Epidemiologist Bureau of Communicable Diseases 1 West Wilson Street Room 318 Madison, WI 53701 608-267-7711 gwen.borlaug@wisconsin.gov