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Overhead

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surgical procedures. Element 3 - Infection Control. Overhead #7 ... All used injection supplies and materials are potentially contaminated and should be discarded. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overhead


1
Element III Engineering, Administrative Work
Practices Controls
  • The Problem
  • Understanding the systematic implementation of
    workplace health safety controls.
  • Controlling the problem
  • Using engineering and work practice controls to
    reduce the opportunity for patient and healthcare
    worker exposure to potentially infectious
    material in all healthcare settings.

2
Learning Objectives
  • Define healthcare-associated disease
    transmission, engineering controls, safe
    injection, and work practice controls
  • Describe specific high-risk practices and
    procedures than increase opportunity for
    healthcare worker and patient exposure to
    potentially infectious material
  • Describe specific measures to prevent
    transmission of bloodborne pathogens from patient
    to patient, healthcare worker to patient, and
    patient to healthcare worker via contaminated
    injection equipment
  • Identify work practice controls designed to
    eliminate the transmission of bloodborne
    pathogens during use of sharp instruments
  • Identify where engineering or work practice
    controls can be utilized to prevent patient
    exposure to bloodborne pathogens.

3
Engineering ControlsRemoving or isolating the
hazardExamples
  • Employee Protection
  • self-sheathing or retractable needles
  • negative pressure isolation
  • puncture-proof sharps containers
  • Patient/Consumer Protection
  • single dose packaging of medication

4
Personal Protective Equipment
  • Personal protective equipment (PPE) places
    barriers between patient or employee and the
    hazard

5
High risk practices and procedures Peructaneous
exposures
  • Exposures through handling, disassembly,
    disposal, and reprocessing of needles and other
    sharp objects
  • manipulating needles and sharps by hand
  • Delaying or improperly disposing of contaminated
    needles or sharp objects
  • recapping using a two-handed technique
  • Performing procedures where there is poor
    visualization, such as
  • Blind suturing
  • non-dominant hand opposing or next to a sharp
  • Performing procedures where bone spicules or
    metal fragments are produced

6
High risk practices and procedures Mucous
membrane or non-intact skin exposures
  • Direct contact with blood or body fluid
  • contaminated hand in contact with eyes, nose or
    mouth
  • open skin lesions on hand/dermatitis
  • cleaning a blood spill
  • handling contaminated instruments
  • Sprays or splashes of blood or body fluid
  • irrigation/suctioning
  • surgical procedures

7
High risk practices and procedures Parenteral
exposures
  • Injection with infectious material may occur
    during
  • Administration of parenteral medication,
  • Sharing blood monitoring devices,
  • Infusion of contaminated blood products or fluids

8
Safe Injection Practices Consequences
  • Unsafe injection practices have resulted in one
    or more of the following
  • Transmission of bloodborne viruses, including HBV
    and HCV to patients
  • Notification of thousands of patients of possible
    exposure to bloodborne pathogens and
    recommendation that they be tested for HBV, HCV,
    and HIV
  • Referral of providers to licensing boards for
    disciplinary action and
  • Malpractice suits filed by patients.

9
Safe Injection Practices Contamination
  • Pathogens including HCV, HBV, and HIV can be
    present in sufficient quantities to produce
    infection in the absence of visible blood.
  • Bacteria and other microbes can be present
    without clouding or other visible evidence of
    contamination.
  • The absence of visible blood or signs of
    contamination in a used syringe, IV tubing,
    multi-dose medication vial, or blood glucose
    monitoring device does NOT mean the item is free
    from potentially infection agents.
  • All used injection supplies and materials are
    potentially contaminated and should be discarded.

10
Safe Injection PracticesPrevention
  • Maintain aseptic technique throughout all aspects
    of injection preparation.
  • Never administer medications from the same
    syringe to more than one patient, even if the
    needle is changed.
  • Never use the same syringe or needle to
    administer IV medications to more than one
    patient, even if the medication is into the IV
    tubing, regardless of the distance from the IV
    insertion site.

11
Safe Injection PracticesPrevention
  • Never enter a vial with a syringe or needle that
    has been used for a patient if the same
    medication might be used for another patient.
  • Dedicate vials of medication to a single patient,
    whenever possible.
  • Never use peripheral capillary blood monitoring
    devices packaged as single-patient use on more
    than one patient.

12
Evaluation and Surveillance of Exposure Incidents
  • Identification of who is at risk for exposure,
  • Identification of what devices cause exposure,
  • Identification of areas/settings where exposures
    occur, and
  • Circumstances by which exposures occur.
  • Post exposure management.

13
Engineering Controls
  • Use Safer devices whenever possible to prevent
    sharps injuries.
  • Use puncture resistant-containers for the
    disposal and transport of needles and other sharp
    objects.
  • Use splatter shields on medical equpipment with
    risk prone procedures (e.g., locking centrifuge
    lids).

14
Engineering controls for bloodborne pathogens
  • Needleless systems
  • Retractable or Self-sheathing needles
  • Puncture-resistant sharps containers
  • Blunt suture needles
  • Centrifuge covers
  • Mechanical pipettes
  • Needle holders

15
Engineering ControlsPuncture Resistant
Containers
  • Refer to published guidelines for the selection,
    evaluation and use (e.g., placement) of sharps
    disposal containers
  • National Institute for Occupational Safety and
    Health (NIOSH)
  • http//www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/bbp/prevent
  • NYSDOH recommendations Household Sharps-Dispose
    of them safely
  • http//www.health.state.ny.us/publications/0909.p
    df

16
Work practice controls for Bloodborne Pathogens
  • Hand hygiene
  • Procedures for cleaning blood and body fluid
    spills.
  • Initial removal of bulk material followed by
    disinfection with an appropriate disinfectant.
  • Proper handling/disposal of blood and body
    fluids, including contaminated patient items.
  • Proper selection, putting on, taking off and
    disposal of PPE.
  • Protection of work surfaces in direct proximity
    to patient procedure treatment areas.

17
Work practice controls for Bloodborne Pathogens
  • Avoid unnecessary use of needles and other sharp
    objects
  • Use care when handling needles other sharp
    objects
  • Avoid recapping unless absolutely medically
    necessary
  • When recapping, use only a one-handed technique
    or safety device
  • Pass sharp instruments by use of designated safe
    zones
  • Disassemble sharp equipment by use of forceps or
    other devices

18
Reducing Hospital InfectionsCDC Guidelines
  • Hand Hygiene Environmental Control

19
Importance of Hand Hygiene
  • Single most important practice to prevent
    institution-based infections
  • Infections are often caused by aerobic
    gram-negative micro-organisms
  • Resident on hands (10-20 deep in skin)
  • Killed or inhibited by soaps, detergents,
    antimicrobials
  • May enter surgical wounds and infect

20
Importance of Hand Hygiene
  • Transient microorganisms often pathogens
  • acquired from colonized or infected patients
  • high-risk and/or isolation units containing
  • virulent or drug resistant organisms
  • wounds or invasive procedures
  • lowered immune function
  • Most transient contaminants removed by
  • vigorous washing for at least 15 seconds
  • rinsing thoroughly under a stream of water

21
Handwashing Products
  • Antiseptics and germicides used on skin
    categorized by Food Drug Administration (FDA)
  • no independent testing
  • not regulated or registered
  • Types
  • Alcohol-based hand sanitizers
  • Antimicrobial soaps
  • Surgical scrubs

22
Handwashing Products
  • Use plain soap or antimicrobial soap when hands
    are visibly dirty or contaminated
  • If bar soap is used, should be on drainage rack
  • Liquid soap must have dispenser emptied, cleaned
    and filled with fresh product (do not add liquid
    to partially filled dispenser)
  • Alcohol based hand rub
  • When hands are not visibly dirty
  • Alternate washing hands with antimicrobial soap

23
Handwashing Facilities
  • Potable (drinkable) water
  • Located conveniently
  • Located in or just outside every patient room
  • Located in or adjacent to rooms for
  • Diagnostic procedures
  • Invasive procedures (cardiac catheterization,
    bronchoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, etc,)
  • Isolation
  • Antimicrobial foams, gels or wipes between
    handwashings

24
Professional and Gender Differences in Observed
Handwashing Between Patients - Australian
Study-2002
  • In CCU
  • Males washed one-third less than females after
    contact with patient or invasive instrument
  • Among nurses in general
  • Both genders had high rates of handwashing
  • Doctors
  • Women washed 88 of time, men 54
  • Physical therapists
  • Both men and women washed after every patient
    contact

25
Needlestick Prevention
  • Mandated by OSHA
  • Evaluation and use of safest available technology
  • Documenting use of frontline employees in
    choosing safer devices
  • Maintaining a sharps injury log
  • Education and training on sharps and their safety
    features
  • ALWAYS activating and not bypassing safety
    features

26
Hypodermic syringes with Retractable Technology
safety feature
Retracted protected position
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