Title: Infection Control in the OR Myths and Misconceptions
1Infection Control in the ORMyths and
Misconceptions
- Bruce Gamage
- Infection Control Consultant
- BCCDC
2Outline
- Dressing for the theatre is it just a fashion
statement? - Masks should we wear them?
- Food in the OR!
- Cleaning the environment How clean is clean?
- Super Bugs is hand washing enough?
- Surgical Hand Scrubs Alcohol vs. CHX
- Instruments is flashing good enough?
- Cleaning challenging instruments acetabular
reamers - Artificial Fingernails theres no place for
them in HC - Ive never seen a body piercing there before!
- The OR of the future designed with IC in mind.
3Dressing for the Theatre
4Evolution of OR Attire
- Origins of Scrub attire
- Paralleled aseptic and sterile technique in late
19th century - Hunter advocated a complete change of costume
rather than don a sterilized coat and trousers - Mayo (1913) operating team wore gowns caps and
masks - 30s and 40s scrub dresses replaced surgeons
uniforms - 60s Pantsuits and scrub dresses replaced full
skirts to reduce risk of clothing contaminating
the sterile field
5IC issues
- Germ theory evolved in the early 19th century
- Principles of asepsis developed in mid-19th
century - The garment of the
HCW is part of the environment that can become
contaminated - Microbes (e.g. Staph, Strep, Pseudomonas) can
adhere to fabrics
6Survival of Microbes on fabric
- Study done at Shiners Hospital in Cincinnati
- Staph and Enterococci can survive for extended
periods of time on materials commonly worn by
HCWs (e.g. 100 cotton or 60/40 cotton blend)
7Laundering of Scrubs
- Contaminated scrubs should be washed in 160?F
(71?C) water with 50-150 ppm chlorine bleach and
dried in a hot dryer
8Home laundering?
- University of Florida conducted a 4 year study to
determine the effect on perinatal infection rate
of wearing home laundered scrubs in LD. Prior to
study rate was 1.7 - after study rate was 1.0. - Practice was found to ? costs without in ? SSI
9Opinions in flux
- Hospitals see scrub attire as a huge cost.
- Experts in IC say there is no empiric data that
shows that home laundering leads to ? infections
than commercial laundering. Risk factors for SSI
are pre-existing morbidity, obesity, diabetes and
? age.
10Expert Opinion?
- APIC/CDC there is little evidence that scrubs
in the OR setting is a means of infection control
in a health care facility - AORN Scrub attire is not intended to be
protective in any way it is simply a uniform.
Its assurance that people coming into the OR are
wearing freshly laundered attire that hasnt been
sat upon by the dog Dorothy Fogg
11AORN Position
- Surgical Attire should be laundered under
controlled conditions where the laundry facility
has specific formulas and they monitor the
concentration of chemicals - AORN does not support home laundering.
12WHO/CDC
- All persons entering the surgical theatre must
wear surgical attire restricted to being worn
only within the surgical area. - The design and composition of surgical attire
should minimize bacterial shedding into the
environment - No recommendations on how or where to launder
scrub suits, on restricting use of scrub suits to
the OR or for covering scrub suits when out of
the OR.
13Masks should we wear them?
14Masks should we wear them?
- AORN all persons entering the restricted area
of the OR suite should wear a mask when open
sterile items and equipment present. - AORN acknowledges that there is a difference of
opinion. - CDC states a surgical mask that fully covers the
mouth and nose when entering the OR if surgery is
about to begin, is already underway or if sterile
equipment is open.
15Whats the evidence?
- Recent reports in the literature advocate wearing
of masks by non-scrubbed staff with forced
ventilation is not necessary - Studies from Europe show that oral bacteria
expelled during talking by non-scrubbed personnel
not in the immediate vicinity of the operating
site posed no risk of infection.
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17What is the risk?
- The risk of contamination depends on
- Airflow
- Traffic
- Personal practices.
- Best practice would require wearing of mask,
independent of distance until research provides
definitive answers.
18Personal Protection
- As part of Routine Practice
- Wearing a mask as part of PPE to reduce the risk
of exposure to potentially infectious material.
19Food in the OR?
20Food in the OR?
- Eating in the OR is not acceptable!
- Eating, drinking, smoking, applying cosmetics or
lip balm and handling contact lenses in work area
where there is reasonable likelihood of
occupational exposure to infectious materials is
prohibited. - This is an OHS issue!
21How clean is clean?
22Cleaning the environment
- Airborne bacteria must be minimized and surfaces
kept clean. - When visible soiling or contamination with BBF
occurs during an operation, use disinfectant to
clean areas before next operation. - There is no need to perform special cleaning or
closure of OR after contaminated or dirty cases.
23Recommendations
- Wet vacuum the OR floor after the last operation
of the day with disinfectant. - Tacky mats at the entrance to the OR have no IC
purpose - There is no recommendation on disinfection of
surfaces or equipment in the OR between
operations if there is no visible soiling. - Routine environmental sampling is not
recommended. Perform only as part of an
epidemiologic investigation.
24WHO recommends
- Cleaning of all horizontal surfaces every morning
- Cleaning and disinfection of horizontal surfaces
and surgical items between procedures - Complete cleaning of the OR at the end of the day
- Complete cleaning of the entire OR annex once a
week.
25Super Bugs is hand washing enough?
26Super bugs
- CDC recommends
- Exclude from duty surgical personnel who have
draining skin lesions until infection has been
ruled out or personnel have been treated and
infection has resolved. - No need to routinely exclude personnel colonized
unless there is epidemiological evidence of
spread in the health care setting.
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28ARO Precautions
- There is no evidence that wearing gloves when
touching colonized patients is necessary. - There is no evidence to support all staff wearing
a gown to enter the room. - There is no evidence for wearing a mask when
caring for a patient with ARO (may ? likelihood
of HCW touching their nose). - There is no evidence that enhanced cleaning is
necessary to ? transmission.
29ARO Precautions
- There is no evidence that wearing gloves when
touching colonized patients is necessary. - There is no evidence to support all staff wearing
a gown to enter the room. - There is no evidence for wearing a mask when
caring for a patient with ARO (may ? likelihood
of HCW touching their nose). - There is no evidence that enhanced cleaning is
necessary to ? transmission.
30Current Recommendations
- Wash your hands!
- Follow Routine Practices
- Use contact precautions if will be having direct
(skin to skin) contact with the patient or their
BBF. - Use regular cleaning practices.
- Antibiotic resistance ? disinfectant resistance.
31Hand Scrubs Alcohol vs. CHX
32Hand Scrubs Alcohol vs. CHX
- A surgical hand disinfection should be performed
by all persons participating in the operative
procedure. - The AORN continues to recommend the traditional
hand scrub with an antimicrobial hand scrub
agent. - AORN acknowledges that alcohol is an excellent
skin antiseptic with a persistent effect for up
to three hours.
33Alcohol scrubs
- Care should be exercsed to use these products if
the procedure is lt3 hours. - At the present time there is sparse evidence
showing that alcohols are more or less effective
than CHX scrubs - Recommend
- Alcohol has no cleaning ability
- First thoroughly wash hands and forearms with
soap and water - Then apply alcohol based surgical hand scrub
according to manufacturers instructions.
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36Instruments is flashing good enough?
37Instruments is flashing good enough?
- Flash sterilization should only be used for
patient care items that will be used immediately
(e.g. to reprocess an inadvertently dropped
instrument) - Instruments should not be flash sterilized
because it is convenient or because you dont
have enough sets or to save time!
38Flash Sterilization
- A chemical integrator that confirms temperature,
pressure and steam saturation was achieved. - Instruments must be cleaned before they can be
sterilized. - Cycle 3 minutes at 132?C for non-porous,
non-lumen - Cycle 10 minutes at 132?C for porous or lumened
instruments. - Complex instruments only at manufacturer's
recommendation. - Implants not recommended.
- Ensure staff are educated, process monitored and
audited.
39Cleaning challenging instruments
40Cleaning challenging instruments
- Reusable endoscopic instruments that are not (or
cant be) properly cleaned and sterilized are a
major cause of nosocomial infections (CDC). - Decontamination and removal of all possible
biomaterial is the most important step in the
sterilization process - When in doubt, throw it out
41The infection control dream
- an instrument that is never reused does not
present and infection risk to another patient!
42Problems with Endoscopes
- Long narrow shaft are difficult if not impossible
to clean. - The more complicated the device the harder it is
to clean. - Focus is on function, not on cleaning in the
design phase. - Forces sterile processing technicians to do what
they can and hope for the best
43Other challenges
- Keeping the instruments free of gross soil.
- Minimize time between use and cleaning process.
- Making sure the SPD staff know and use the
correct procedures. - Having the right cleaning equipment and solutions
in the right place - Complex instruments that requires time-consuming
disassembly, cleaning and reassembly before
processing
44Proper Steps
- Begin cleaning as soon as possible (dont let
blood and tissue dry and cake - covering with a
wet cloth is not enough. - Place the instruments in a basin of solution as
soon as they come off the procedure table. - Wipe down surfaces and flush lumens to remove
gross debris. - Separate general from specialized instruments.
- Transport to SPD.
- Clean and disinfect or sterilize according to
manufacturer's written instructions.
45Manufacturers Responsibility
- Manufacturers must incorporate cleanability
into design. - Manufacturers should provide documentation from
an independent laboratory that proves the device
can actually be cleaned. Dennis Maki.
46Acetabular Reamers
- In January 2004, a technician at a hospital in
Canada discovered that some of these instruments
could be partially disassembled prior to
cleaning. This may have not been known by some
hospitals using this equipment and the
information originally received from the
manufacturer did not adequately describe the
disassembly procedures.
47What about artificial fingernails?
48What about artificial fingernails?
- Some folks think its OK to wear acrylic nails if
they are only circulating - Artificial should not be worn in the
perioperative setting - AORN Artificial nails should not be worn.
49Rationale
- The is not evidence that artificial nails
increase the risk of SSI. - These nail may harbour organisms and prevent
effective handwashing. - High numbers of gram-negative organisms have been
cultured from personnel wearing artificial nails!
50Ive never seen a body piercing there before!
51Body Piercing!?!
- Removing jewelry means removing jewelry!
- There is a risk of burns if an electrosurgical
unit is used. - Risk is less if ESU has an
- isolated generator that
- eliminates the risk of alternate site burns.
- Ask patients to remove body piercing prior to
coming to the hospital.
52The OR of the FutureDesigning an OR with
Infection Control in mind.
53The OR of the Future
- OR designed to be large (600 sq. ft.) allow
greater separation of sterile field and
non-sterile perimeter. - Patients and OR staff have separate entrances to
avoid cross contamination - No floor penetrations and all wall and ceiling
penetrations are sealed.
54Designing the OR for IC
- An observation gallery to minimize people going
in and out. - Hands free or voice activated surgical equipment
(robotic). - Multiple cameras for consulting and teaching
purposes. - Hands free telephone and voice activated devices.
- Touch screen computers instead of keyboards.
55Designing the OR for IC
- Ceiling-hung equipment booms to hold equipment
off the floor. - All utilities and medical gases originate from
ceiling to eliminate hoses and cables running
across the floor and in and out of the sterile
field. - Makes things much easier to clean and disinfect.
56Designing the OR for IC
- Special attention given to surfaces finishes for
ease of cleaning and durability. - Epoxy terrazzo floor.
- Ceramic tile walls with epoxy-based grout.
- Seamless gypsum wallboard for ceiling, sealed
with epoxy paint. - Stainless steel and glass cabinets.
57Ventilation
- Laminar flow HVAC system that delivers air from
the ceiling and exhausts in rooms corners. - Positive pressure to outside rooms
- All ductwork insulated on the exterior to
minimize surfaces where moulds and bacteria can
grow.
58Lighting
- Voice command adjustable lighting.
- Gaskets and seals on fixtures to promote dust
control and make cleaning easier.
59Goals
- Easier to clean ? faster TAT
- Shortened time frames
- Voice activated ? everything moves quicker
- Patient is open on the table for a shorter period
- Risk of infection ?
60Summary
- IC practice should be evidence based.
- Sometimes best practice is based on expert
opinion. - It shouldnt be weve always done it that way.
- New designs should have IC in mind.
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