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Infection Prevention

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Need to answer #1 first before sorting out the rest! 5. It's not all about SARS though... Can identify where each is best learnt and who is responsible ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Infection Prevention


1
Infection Prevention Control Core Competencies
for HCWs
  • Dr. Donna Moralejo
  • Novice ICP Day
  • June 2008

2
Overview
  • IPC Core Competencies for HCWs
  • Why we need them/benefits
  • How they were developed
  • Details of the competencies
  • Areas for action by ICPs

3
Background The SARS outbreak
  • 21 of 8098 SARS cases were in front line workers
    who cared for SARS pts
  • Many HCWs became infected because they
  • Failed to adequately/appropriately use routine
    practices like hand hygiene and PPE
  • Frequently contaminated themselves when removing
    PPE

4
SARS Raised Qs
  • What do HCWs need to know to protect themselves
    and pts?
  • Knowledge, skills (PPE, HW), other
  • Do they know it?
  • How can we get them to know it?
  • Need to answer 1 first before sorting out the
    rest!

5
Its not all about SARS though
  • Influenza
  • Seasonal, pandemic
  • Other respiratory infections
  • C. difficile, norovirus, other GI infections
  • Surgical Site Infections
  • Other HCAI

6
Core Competency Development
  • CHICA-Canada set out to develop a set of common
    core competencies in IPC that
  • Applies to all HCWs involved with pt care
  • Allows them to work safely
  • Prevents transmission of organisms in their
    setting (institution)
  • Education Committee coordinated project

7
Methods (Nov 2004-May 2005)
  • Round 1 Asked Chapters to id competencies
  • Round 2 Compiled list sent for feedback from
    individuals and groups (n 78 respondents)
  • Categorized by major topic 7 topics
  • Interlinked
  • Final list of 36 Core Competencies identified by
    at least 80 were included
  • 100 consensus on 6 of 7 topics

8
7 Areas of Core Competencies
  • Basic Microbiology (6)
  • Hand Hygiene (4)
  • Routine Practices Transmission-based
    Precautions (4)
  • Personal Protective Equipment (4)
  • Personal Safety (8)
  • Sterilization Disinfection (3)
  • Critical Assessment Skills (7)

36 items total
9
Competencies are Interlinked
  • Basic microbiology is essential for understanding
    hand hygiene, PPE, critical assessment
  • HH and PPE are essential for Routine Practices
    and Personal Safety
  • Critical thinking applies to all

10
Benefits of Achieving Core Competencies in HCW
  • Provide HCW with
  • Tools for assessing/acting on a situation
  • Confidence in IPC measures used
  • Ability to use IPC measures correctly
  • Reduce work related stress/fear of exposure,
  • Reduce actual exposure (daily, emergency)

11
Benefits of Articulating Core Competencies for
HCW
  • Can use to specify learning objectives and
    relevant learning strategies
  • Can identify where each is best learnt and who is
    responsible
  • Basic education vs. continuing education
  • IPC vs NSD vs self vs admin vs
  • Platform for adding occupation-specific
    competencies

12
What Can ICPs do?
  • Focus on education
  • Formal, informal
  • Base sessions on core competencies
  • Share them with managers, staff
  • Emphasize principles, skills practice and
    discussion of application to different scenarios
    relevant to audience
  • Not just info sharing, rules

13
Key Challenge
  • We already have basic and continuing education on
    IPC
  • So what do we need to do more of or do
    differently?

14
7 Core Competencies/Action
  • Basic Microbiology (6)
  • Hand Hygiene (4)
  • Routine Practices Transmission-based
    Precautions (4)
  • Personal Protective Equipment (4)
  • Personal Safety (8)
  • Sterilization Disinfection (3)
  • Critical Assessment Skills (7)

36 items total
15
1. Basic Microbiology
  • Understands basic microbiology and how infections
    can be transmitted in health care settings

16
Basic Microbiology
  • Chain of infection agent, transmission, host
  • All microbes are not the same (bacteria, virus,
    etc)
  • Pathogenic vs normal flora
  • Routes of transmission (contact,
    droplet,airborne)
  • Recognize susceptible person
  • Id reportable/Notifiable Diseases
  • Define ARO local protocols
  • Describe Respiratory Etiquette, importance

17
Chain of Infection
  • Infectious agent
  • Transmission
  • Susceptible host

18
The Chain of Infection
Portal of exit
Portal of entry
19
Routes of Transmission
  • Direct contact (skin-to-skin, mucous membrane to
    mucous membrane)
  • Indirect (via intermediate surface, local)
  • Vehicle borne inanimate object
  • Blankets, food, water, blood
  • Vector borne live intermediate
  • Mosquitos, tse-tse
  • Airborne vs Droplet

20
Process of Infection
  • Microbe enters body
  • Microbe multiplies in tissue (bacteria) or in
    cell (viruses)
  • Bacterial toxins damage cells
  • Physical damage
  • Hosts inflammatory and immune responses destroy
    microbe
  • SS from IR, inflammation, loss of function

21
Risk of Infection if
  • Infection occurs if
  • microbes gtgt defenses
  • Need exposure to/ entry of
    microbe
  • Risk increases with
  • Number of microbes (microbial load)
  • Virulence of microbes
  • Host susceptibility

22
Discussion for Understanding
  • Colonization vs. Infection
  • Colonization organism grows and multiplies
    without tissue changes
  • Infection damage/change to tissue
  • Exposure ? Transmission ? Infection
  • All airborne may be transmitted by droplet but
    not vice versa!
  • Splashes/sprays travel through air so airborne
    BUT transmission is via droplet route, not
    airborne

23
From the School of Photographic Arts and
Sciences, Rochester Institute of Technology
24
Breaking the Chain of Infection
Portal of exit
Portal of entry
25
Infection Prevention Control
  • Interrupt chain of infection at any point no
    infection!
  • Eliminate infectious agent
  • Drugs, disinfectant, remove reservoir
  • Disrupt transmission
  • HH, masks, gowns etc, mosquito/vector control
  • Cough etiquette
  • Decrease host susceptibility
  • Vaccines, good nutrition, good skin integrity

26
Eg 1 Chain of Infection
Person with cold Susceptible person
  • Coughs/sneezes on someone directly
  • Coughs on hand and deposits virus on doorknob
  • Droplets land directly on mucous membranes
  • Picks up virus on hands when opens doors and then
    touches own mucous. membranes

Outline the chain of Infection. How can the
chain be broken?
27
2. Hand Hygiene
  • Understands the importance of hand hygiene/ hand
    washing
  • Best method of preventing transmission
  • Id when necessary to perform
  • Steps to proper hand hygiene
  • Demonstrate
  • Hand washing
  • Use of alcohol based hand rub

28
WHOs 5 moments for HH
  • Before patient contact
  • Before aseptic task
  • After body fluid exposure risk
  • After patient contact
  • After contact with patient surroundings

29
How to Perform HH
30
Discussion for Understanding
  • Compare indications in RPAP Guidelines with the
    WHOs five moments
  • Discuss examples of each moment
  • Discuss why the emphasis on alcohol based hand
    rub
  • Advantages/disadvantages
  • Discuss when to wear gloves and link between HH
    and gloves

31
Demonstrate and Practice!

Dirty Hands Hand Washing
Clean Hands
32
Why dont HCWs perform HH?
33
Lots of Reasons
  • Irritation and dryness 
  • No sinks or inconveniently located
  • Lack of soap, paper, towel 
  • Often too busy or insufficient time 
  • Patient needs take priority 
  • HH interferes with HCW/pt relationship 
  • Low risk of acquiring infection from pts 
  • No need if wearing gloves
  • Lack of knowledge of guidelines
  • Not thinking about it, forgetfulness 
  • No role model
  • Skeptic about the value of hand hygiene 
  • Disagree with recommendations 

Unclear from research re what will work to
improve HH
Whats their reason? What can they do about it?
34
3. Routine Practices Transmission-Based
Precautions
  • Understands the activities of Routine Practices
    Standard Precautions
  • Understands Additional Transmission-based
    Precautions
  • Why and when they are used
  • Assesses need based on activities
  • Adapts for practice setting

35
4. Personal Protective Equipment
  • Knows and selects appropriate/required PPE for
    specific activities, clinical presentations and
    specific diseases relevant for their jobs
  • Demonstrates appropriate use for PPE
  • Donning and removing gloves, gowns, protective
    glasses, face shield, etc
  • Use of NIOSH mask

36
RPAP
  • Routine Practices
  • Assess need based on patient care activities
  • Minimal practice standard
  • Key to preventing transmission
  • Additional Precautions
  • Route of transmission determines precaution
    category
  • Can operate a negative pressure room

37
  • Antibiotic Resistant Organisms (AROs)
  • VRE, MRSA, Clostridium difficile

38
Respirator Placement
  • Fit Check
  • Quickly inhale/exhale
  • Should feel mask move under hands
  • If not, reposition it

39
Cap Placement
  • Ensure cap covers all hair

40
Protective Goggles
41
Isolation Gown
  • Long sleeved isolation gown
  • Ties must be tied
  • At neck waist level

42
Gloves
  • Ensure gloves are pulled over gown cuffs

43
A brief Hx of RPAP
  • Universal Precautions 1988
  • Applied to those body fluids associated with
    blood-borne pathogens, namely, hepatitis B virus,
    hepatitis C virus, and HIV
  • Standard Precautions mid-1990s
  • Applied to all body fluids
  • Routine Practices 1999
  • All settings, all patients
  • Eastern Health moving to RP

44
Pyramid and Iceberg of Disease
Explain in terms of examples they can relate to!
45
Practice SkillsGive Feedback
46
Teach Risk Assessment and Action
Is there potential for exposure to secretions/
blood via cough or sneeze?
No
Yes
Protect mucous membranes with mask and eye gear
Teach pt cough etiquette
HH to protect hands
47
Discuss Risk Assessment
  • What it is and how to do it
  • Using context-specific examples
  • Pros and cons (vs. rote action)
  • Is overestimating risk (and increasing use of
    PPE) better than underestimating risk and
    under-use?
  • Different consequences, e.g., workload, using up
    supplies, reduced care to pts, fear, social
    isolation

48
Apply! Eg 2 Pt has norovirus
  • What precautions are required and why?
  • If doc steps into room to tell pt something
  • If nurse brings in medication and leaves it on
    bedside table
  • If nurse helps pt take the medication
  • If LPN does morning care and vital signs
  • If PCA empties bedpan
  • If housekeeping cleans bedside area

49
5. Personal Safety
  • Knows how to appropriately manage sharps, and
    blood and body fluid spills
  • Recognizes appropriate first aid activities for
    exposure
  • Understands the role of vaccines in preventing
    certain infections
  • Knows where to get info on conditions that
    require absence from work or work restrictions

50
6. Sterilization and Disinfection
  • Recognizes that reusable equipment that has been
    in contact with a pt should be cleaned and
    reprocessed before use for another pt.
  • Appreciates difference between clean, disinfected
    and sterile items
  • Knows difference between regular and biohazard
    wastes

51
7. Critical Assessment Skills
Varies by HCW type
  • Knowledge r/t access of infection control
    resources (IPC manual)
  • Id high risk pts and how to manage them
  • Demonstrate problem solving and critical thinking
    when presented with infection control studies and
    situations
  • Id clusters of illnesses (Epi principles)

52
Critical Assessment Skills (contd)
  • Implement protocols as directed by the IPC
  • Be a leader/role model to other HCW, pts and
    visitors by adhering to IPC principles
  • Demonstrate work practices that reduce risk of
    infection (immunization, not coming to work sick)

53
Overview
  • IPC Core Competencies for HCWs
  • Why we need them/benefits
  • How they were developed
  • Details of the competencies
  • Areas for action by ICPs

54
What Can ICPs do?
  • Focus on education, both formal and informal
  • Base sessions on core competencies
  • Share them with managers, staff
  • Get learners involved!
  • Emphasize principles, skills practice, discussion
    and application to different scenarios relevant
    to audience
  • Do not just share info, rules

55
What Do ICPs Need?
  • Knowledge of the core competencies
  • A good understanding of IPC principles and
    guidelines, and how to apply them
  • Able to assess and understand different learners
    needs and create examples to engage them
  • Tools, e.g., scenarios, teaching resources
  • We need to evaluate what works and share
  • Time

56
Time Theres Never Enough!
  • Demand sufficient time/resources for education
  • Balance education with other duties
  • Restructure education sessions so have time to
    practice, discuss and apply
  • Accept may need to cover fewer items but will
    cover them very well!
  • Build in follow up in practice area

57
Its Not Just Up To ICPs
  • Up to individuals
  • HCWs, IPC depts, schools, Cont. Ed., admin,
    institutions, regions
  • ICPs, Educators, Admin, staff share
    responsibility
  • Assess local/individual needs
  • Develop or access resources
  • Implement strategies in systematic way

58
Conclusion
  • Core competencies for HCWs are available
  • Core Competencies will get us moving in the same
    direction toward same goals
  • Learn them and implement strategies to achieve
    them
  • Rethink how you conduct your education
  • Focus on linking understanding and
    context-appropriate action
  • Need to share resources and communicate needs,
    strategies, successes and failures

59
Key reference
  • Infection Prevention and Control Core
    Competencies for HCW a consensus document
  • EA Henderson and CHICA-Canada Education Committee
    and members of CHICA-Canada Chapters
  • Canadian Journal of Infection Control Spring
    2006 21(1) pp 62-67.

60
Thank you! Any Questions?
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