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Updated Interim Infection Control Guidance for 2009 H1N1 Influenza. CDR Arjun Srinivasan, MD Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion David N. Weissman, MD National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
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Updated Interim Infection Control Guidance for 2009 H1N1 Influenza CDR Arjun Srinivasan, MD Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion David N. Weissman, MD National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Note from ONA about this guidance presented by the CDC • The Oregon Dept. of Human Services infection control guidance for H1N1 is in the process of being updated and may not reflect all of the recommendations made in this presentation by the CDC. If you have questions about the information presented in this PPT or about Oregon DHS guidance for H1N1 please contact Lynda Enos at enos@oregonrn.org L. Enos Nov 5, 2009
Continuing Education Disclaimer In compliance with continuing education requirements, all presenters must disclose any financial or other relationships with the manufacturers of commercial products, suppliers of commercial services, or commercial supporters as well as any use of unlabeled product(s) or product(s) under investigational use. CDC, our planners, and our presenters wish to disclose they have no financial interests or other relationships with the manufacturers of commercial products, suppliers of commercial services, or commercial supporters. Presentations will not include any discussion of the unlabeled use of a product or a product under investigational use with the exception of Dr. Srinivasan’s discussion on the re-use of N-95 respirators that are labeled for single use only. There is no commercial support.
Accrediting Statements • CME: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention designates this educational activity for a maximum of 1 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. • CNE: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is accredited as a provider of Continuing Nursing Education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation. This activity provides 1 contact hour. • CEU: The CDC has been approved as an Authorized Provider by the International Association for Continuing Education and Training (IACET), 8405 Greensboro Drive, Suite 800, McLean, VA 22102. The CDC is authorized by IACET to offer 0.1 CEU's for this program. • CECH: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is a designated provider of continuing education contact hours (CECH) in health education by the National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc. This program is a designated event for the CHES to receive 1 Category I contact hour in health education, CDC provider number GA0082.
Overview • Guidance released on 10/14/2009 replaces previous infection control guidance. • Applies to all settings where healthcare is delivered. • Applies uniquely to the 2009 H1N1 pandemic- not meant to establish new infection control policies for influenza. • Will be updated as needed as new information becomes available.
Key Difference From Previous Guidance • Increased emphasis on the importance of a multi-faceted approach. • Revised exclusion time period for healthcare personnel (HCP) with H1N1 • Changes to isolation precautions • Updated and expanded discussion on respiratory protection
Where and To Whom Does This Guidance Apply? • Guidance applies to any healthcare personnel, defined broadly as “all persons whose occupational activities involve contact with patients or contaminated material”. • Includes non-employees like volunteers, contractors, students, clergy etc. • Applies in any setting where care is delivered: acute care, long-term care, home care, outpatient care, school clinics etc.
For Which Patients Should this Guidance be Used? • For all patients with confirmed or suspected H1N1 influenza infection. • Because the symptoms are non-specific and because testing for H1N1 infection may be limited, this guidance may be applicable for all patients with respiratory illness.
Modes of 2009 H1N1 Influenza Transmission • Contact- usually of hands with an infectious patient or fomite, followed by self-inoculation onto mucosal surfaces. • Droplet exposure of mucosal surfaces • Small particle aerosols in vicinity of an infectious individual.
Review and Update Pandemic Plans • Facilities should review their pandemic influenza plans in light of the current situation and review implementation considerations. • Resource allocation • Staffing • Surge capacity • Pandemic plan checklists are available at www.pandemicflu.gov.
Implement a Multi-Faceted Infection Control Approach • Facilities should employ a variety of complimentary infection control strategies, referred to as a “hierarchy of controls”. • Groups interventions into categories, based on their effectiveness.
Hierarchy of Controls 1. Eliminate exposures 2. Engineering controls 3. Administrative controls 4. Personal protective equipment
Eliminate Exposures • Minimize outpatient visits for patients with mild respiratory illness. • Postpone elective visits/procedures for patients with respiratory illness. • When possible, exclude ill visitors to facilities.
Engineering Controls • Do not depend on implementation by HCP. • Using partitions in triage and patient care areas to reduce potential exposures. • Using Plexiglas barriers in triage/intake areas.
Administrative Controls • Depend on consistent implementation by management and HCP • Vaccination • Respiratory hygiene/cough etiquette • Enforcing exclusion of ill HCP
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) • Dependent on consistent use of PPE whenever exposures occur, technique, and properly functioning equipment. • HCP must be trained on proper use of PPE- both when and how.
Vaccination • Promote and administer both the 2009 seasonal and H1N1 vaccines. • HCP are a high priority group for vaccination. • Where H1N1 vaccine supplies are limited, priority should go to HCP who are most likely to be exposed to infectious patients and those who are at high risk for complications from H1N1 infection.
Vaccination- Live Attenuated Vaccine and HCP • Live attenuated vaccine can be used in HCP who: • Meet labeling eligibility criteria • Do not work with severely immune compromised patients in protective environments (bone marrow transplant). • LAIV can be used for HCP working with less immune suppressed patients and HCP working in NICUs.
Enforce Respiratory Hygiene/Cough Etiquette • Source control is critical in reducing exposure risks. • Should apply in all triage and waiting areas. • Should also apply even after patients are admitted to facilities.
Establish Access Control and Triage Measures • Establish non-punitive policies to ensure ill HCP do not come to work. • Establish mechanisms to identify patients and visitors with respiratory illness at entry points to the facility. • Design triage/waiting areas to minimize exposure risks (e.g. spacing of patients, partitions).
Manage Visitor Access and Movement • Limit visitors for patients in isolation for influenza. • Instruct visitors to limit movement within the facility. • Ensure visitors are not present during aerosol generating procedures.
Patient Placement and Transport • Instruct ill patients on source control measures- covering mouth and nose, hand hygiene. • Place into a private room with door closed (negative pressure room not needed). • Consult infection control if private rooms are not available. • Transport within facilities should follow current facility guidance • Limit transport to medically necessary • Ensure communication with receiving areas
Isolation Precautions • Limit the number of HCP entering isolation rooms to those necessary for providing care. • Instruct HCP on the importance of hand hygiene before and after patient interactions. • Use standard precautions for all patient interactions- wear gowns, gloves, eye protection if splashes/contact with infectious material anticipated.
Duration of Isolation Precautions for Patients • Patients with suspected or confirmed H1N1 influenza should remain in isolation for 7 days after the onset of symptoms or until 24 hours after resolution of symptoms, whichever is longer. • Clinical judgment required for cough • If isolation resources are limited, priority should be given to patients earlier in course of illness.
Environmental Cleaning • Routine cleaning and disinfection strategies normally used during influenza season should be used. • Includes management of laundry, utensils and medical waste.
Respiratory Protection - Outline of Topics - • Views of aerosol transmission • Does respiratory protection prevent transmission in healthcare settings? • CDC respiratory protection recommendation • Respiratory protection supply considerations
Views of Aerosol Transmission • Traditional view of viral aerosol transmission: airborne (small particle) vs. large droplet • More contemporary view: viral aerosol transmission can be characterized along a continuum as obligate, preferential, or opportunistic, depending on an agent’s ability to be transmitted and induce disease through fine particle aerosols and other routes (Roy & Milton. NEJM 2004) • Studies on influenza transmission show that airborne (inhalation) transmission is one of the potential routes of transmission [Institute of Medicine (IOM) 2009]http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=12748#description
Does respiratory protection prevent transmission in healthcare settings? • Even if an intervention is efficacious, it may not be effective • Although it recommended respiratory protection as a preventive intervention, IOM noted the need for effectiveness research (IOM 2009) • An important randomized, controlled study comparing incidence of influenza in Canadian nurses using surgical masks or N95 respirators has recently been published [Loeb M et al. JAMA. 2009 Oct 1. (Epub ahead of print)]
Facemasks and disposable N95 respirators • A facemask is a loose-fitting, disposable device. Facemasks may be labeled as surgical, laser, isolation, dental or medical procedure masks and help block large-particle droplets, splashes, sprays or splatter • A disposable N95 respirator is a respiratory protective device designed to achieve a very close facial fit and very efficient filtration of airborne particles. In addition to blocking splashes, sprays and large droplets, the respirator is also designed to prevent the wearer from breathing in very small particles that may be in the air. Text excerpted from: http://www.fda.gov
Results: Surgical Mask vs. N95 Loeb M et al. JAMA. 2009 Oct 1. [Epub ahead of print]
Summary • 4-fold rise in serum antibody titers was common, rarely associated with symptoms, and not different between study arms • If asymptomatic influenza is common in nurses, it might have important implications for infection control • Clinical illness was rare and tended to be less frequent in the N95 group • Lab and clinical findings were not consistent. Small numbers make clinical outcomes difficult to interpret • More studies are needed with better power to address clinical illness as an outcome • As more studies become available, it will be possible to assess coherence of results across multiple studies and to pool data from multiple studies for meta-analysis Loeb M et al. JAMA. 2009 Oct 1. [Epub ahead of print]
CDC Respiratory Protection Recommendation • Use of respiratory protection that is at least as protective as a fit-tested disposable N95 respirator for healthcare personnel who are in close contact with patients with suspected or confirmed 2009 H1N1 influenza. • Close contact is defined as working within 6 feet of the patient or entering into a small enclosed airspace shared with the patient (e.g., average patient room). • This recommendation applies uniquely to the special circumstances of the current 2009 H1N1 pandemic during the fall and winter of 2009-2010.
Required Respirator Program Elements Written standard operating procedures that include: Permissible practices for respirator use. Respiratory program administration. Respirator selection. Inspection of respirators. Cleaning and maintenance of respirators. Storage of respirators. Training in respiratory protection. Fit testing of respirators. Respirator program evaluation. Medical Surveillance of respirator users. Excellent Resource: OSHA respiratory protection e-tool: http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/respiratory/
Respiratory Protection Supply Considerations • The updated guidelines recognize supply issues and provide strategies for getting the most benefit from available supplies of respiratory protection. • Highest priority: to ensure that respirators remain available for situations where respiratory protection is most important, such as performance of aerosol-generating procedures on patients with suspected or confirmed 2009 H1N1 flu or provision of care to patients with diseases other than influenza that require respiratory protection, such as TB.
Strategies to Conserve Supplies of Disposable N95 Respirators • Minimize the number of individuals who need to use respiratory protection through the use of engineering and administrative controls; • Use alternatives to disposable N95 respirators where feasible; • Extend the use, and consider reuse of disposable N95 respirators; and • Prioritize the use of N95 respirators for those personnel at highest risk of exposure.
Types of Respirators Mentioned in Guidance No Valve Exhalation Valve Powered Air- Purifying (Loose Fitting) Elastomeric Half-Facepiece Filtering Facepiece (FFP); N95 and others
“Extended Use” of Disposable N95 Respirators Definition: wearing disposable N95 respirators over serial patient encounters, without removal and re-donning between encounters. • Steps to minimize risk of contact transmission • Discard disposable N95 respirators following use during aerosol generating procedures. • Discard disposable N95 respirators if contaminated with blood, respiratory secretions, or other bodily fluids from patients. • Consider use of a face shield over the disposable N95 respirator to prevent surface contamination. • Perform hand hygiene before and after touching the respirator.
“Reuse” of Disposable N95 Respirators • Definition: removing and re-donning disposable N95 respirators between patient encounters • Involves more touching of the respirator and the face than extended use • Steps to minimize risk of contact transmission • All of those noted for extended use, plus: • Disposable respirators must only be used and re-used by a single wearer. • Do not re-use a disposable respirator that is obviously contaminated, damaged or hard to breathe through. • Store the respirator in a clean, breathable container such as a paper bag between uses. • Avoid touching the inside of the respirator.
Prioritized Use Mode • Used when measures to minimize consumption of available respirators are not enough to overcome supply shortages and the ability to provide respiratory protection for situations where it is most important (e.g., aerosol-generating procedures, other agents such as TB) is threatened. • Goal is to maintain ability to provide respiratory protection for situations where it is most important until supplies are expected to be replenished. • Respiratory protection is extended to other groups in order of priority, as dictated by supply constraints. • Those in close contact with suspected or confirmed influenza cases who do not receive respiratory protection should be provided with surgical masks.
Prioritization of Respiratory Protection During Respirator Shortages for Healthcare Personnel Not Participating in Aerosol-Generating Procedures (Numbers 1 through 4 indicate relative priorities for respiratory protection, with 1 the highest priority and 4 the lowest priority)
Aerosol-Generating Procedures • Bronchoscopy • Sputum induction • Endotracheal intubation and extubation • Open suctioning of airways • Cardiopulmonary resuscitation • Autopsies
Monitoring for Illness in HCP • Facilities should establish mechanisms to proactively identify ill HCP and monitor illness in HCP. • Self monitoring or active symptom surveillance • HCP should be instructed not to report to work when ill. • HCP should be educated on when to seek treatment when ill.
Exclusion of HCP with Respiratory Illness • HCP who develop febrile respiratory illness should be excluded from work for at least 24 hours after they no longer have a fever, without the use of fever reducing medicines. • Exception: HCP who work with severely immune compromised patients.
Exclusion of HCP with Respiratory Illness • HCP who develop acute respiratory symptoms without fever should be allowed to continue or return to work. • Exception: HCP who work with severely immune compromised patients.
Exclusion of HCP with Respiratory Illness • HCP who work with immune compromised patients should be excluded for 7 days or until resolution of symptoms, whichever is longer. • Judgment required for cough as a symptom • Could return to work sooner if absence of H1N1 influenza documented by PCR of respiratory secretions.
Antiviral Treatment and Chemoprophylaxis • Recommendations available in a separate guidance document that does address HCP.
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