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Clostridium Difficile Infectious Diarrhea

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Title: Clostridium Difficile Infectious Diarrhea


1
Clostridium Difficile Infectious Diarrhea
  • (CDI)
  • Infection Prevention Learning Module
  • Prepared by Infection Prevention and Control
    Services
  • Vancouver Island Health Authority

2
Infectious Diarrhea
  • There are many pathogens responsible for causing
    diarrhea illness in humans. Of concern to health
    care facilities are
  • Norovirus
  • E coli 0157H7
  • Rotavirus
  • Clostridium difficile
  • The most contagious of these is Norovirus but
    the one most likely to cause serious and long
    lasting disease in hospitalized patients is C.
    difficile !

3
Clostridium Difficile
  • Clostridium difficile is a gram positive spore
    forming bacillus that lives in the intestinal
    tract of healthy people
  • C. Difficile is also found in soil, water and
    animal feces

4
Clostridium Difficile
  • People can become colonized with C. difficile and
    have no symptoms
  • Antibiotics given for other infection destroy
    normal flora of the gut and allow over growth of
    this bacteria
  • C. difficile produces toxin which attacks the
    lining of the intestinal tract leading to
    malabsorption of fluids and nutrients

5
Clostridium Difficile
  • Symptoms of CDAD can include
  • watery diarrhea (more than 3 loose stools within
    a 24hr period)
  • fever
  • loss of appetite
  • nausea
  • abdominal pain/tenderness
  • Diarrhea can lead to serious complications,
    including dehydration, loss of bowel tissue
    function, toxic megacolon and death.

6
Clostridium Difficile Associated Diarrhea (CDAD)
  • People at greatest risk for infection have
  • other illnesses and/or are elderly
    (eg. immunocompromised), or
  • conditions requiring use of broad spectrum
    antibiotics (eg. Clindamycin, Cephalosporins,
    Fluoroquinolones (Gatifloxacin))

7
The risk of becoming colonized when in hospital
is higher than 25 - WHY?
  • People are exposed to C. difficile Contaminated
    Environmental Surfaces/fomites

8
People are exposed
  • When
  • Patients not recognized as having CDI contaminate
    the environmental surfaces and
  • These surfaces are inadequately cleaned and
    disinfection with a chemical capable of killing
    the spores
  • Contaminated hands or clothing transfer the
    bacteria from ill patients to others within their
    care

9
Surveillance
  • Incidence of CDAD infections has been on the
    rise in Canadian Acute Care facilities

10
Surveillance
  • The average determined in the 1997 national
    surveillance was 5.9 cases per 1000 admissions
  • Disease tracking across the country suggests that
    infections are on the rise. Outbreaks have
    occurred throughout VIHA in recent years
  • Each case of CDAD represents 7 to 15 additional
    days of hospital stay

11
Infection Reduction Strategies
  • The following strategies have been shown to
    reduce the incidence of healthcare associated C.
    difficile colitis infections (CDI)

12
Reduction Strategies
  • Early Recognition
  • Suspect CDI in anyone who is admitted with or
    develops diarrhea of undetermined cause
  • People can develop symptoms from 2 or 3 days to 1
    month after exposure to the bacteria

13
Reduction Strategies
  • 2. Patient Placement
  • Manage in a private room
  • If no private room available, admit to
    semi-private and
  • Patient/resident to use dedicated commode or
    toilet

14
Reduction Strategies
  • 3. Laboratory Confirmation
  • Send first available stool for C. difficile toxin
    studies using regular dry C S container
  • Information on requisition note any recent
    antibiotic administered
  • Results
  • Toxin Positive infection
  • Toxin Negative with diarrhea lab comment
    referred for Cytotoxin studies probable
    Infection
  • Cytotoxin positive Infection
  • Toxin Negative Cytotoxin negative diarrhea
    NYD (continue precautions until Diagnosis made or
    diarrhea resolved x 3 days)

15
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16
Reduction Strategies
  • 4. Infection Control Interventions
  • Contact precautions signage on curtain OR at foot
    of bed if in the semiprivate room
  • Place patient name on dedicated commode/
    wheelchair
  • Wear gown and gloves for personal care
  • Wash hands with soap water as alcohol hand
    sanitizers do not penetrate the spore shell.

17
Reduction Strategies
  • Environmental Management
  • 2 STEP cleaning and disinfection
  • Housekeeping to use Accelerated Hydrogen Peroxide
    (AHP-Virox) to disinfect bed space contact
    surfaces twice daily
  • Terminal disinfection with AHP twice upon
    discharge
  • Minimal supplies and equipment are taken into
    room and dedicate these to the room/patient
    whenever possible
  • All care assessment equipment to be cleaned
    disinfected by nurses when removed from room
    using Accelerated Hydrogen Peroxide (Virox)

18
Reduction Strategies
  • 6.Personal Care
  • Bed pans/commode pots must be cleaned and
    disinfected
  • using the mechanical washer disinfector or
  • rinsed emptied toilet of private room or soiled
    utility hopper if patient in semiprivate and them
    cleaned with AHP before reuse
  • Change the wash basin daily and following peri
    care
  • Handle soiled linen with care directly into the
    tote (Do not throw soiled linen on floor !)

19
Reduction Strategies
  • Patient Visitor education
  • Visitors who will provide personal care are to
    wear gown and gloves
  • Instruction on hand-washing with soap water
  • All patients confirmed to have CDI to receive a
    copy of the Patient Information Pamphlet
  • Patients may be out of room for ambulation
    provided
  • They are not incontinent of stool presently
  • They wear a clean hospital issue robe
  • They wash their hands with soap and water prior
    to leaving the room

20
Patient Information Pamphlet
21
Notification Records
  • Notify person responsible for Infection Control
  • Note any recent past admission to hospital,
    reason for this admission and type of antibiotic
  • Transcribe relevant information and Infection
    Control precautions in Kardex
  • Notify Most Responsible Physician (MRP) of
    clinical signs suspicions
  • Notify any receiving or diagnostic department
    porters while diarrhea is present

22
Treatment Patient Disposition
  • Toxin
  • Will require either Metronidazole or Vancomycin
    oral therapy
  • Toxin
  • If diarrhea persists, on the third day resend
    specimen for C. diff Toxin and contact the
    physician. The physician may treat.
  • If diarrhea resolves while you wait the three
    days then the patient may be colonized or has
    diarrhea provoked by another pathogen or
    physiological cause

23
Treatment Patient Disposition
  • Once appropriate treatment is started, patient
    can be cohorted with another CDAD patient also
    receiving treatment
  • Infection Control measures can be discontinued
    once patient has no diarrhea for 3 days and
    stools are documented as being formed
  • 2 STEP Terminal cleaning and disinfection of bed
    and room must be done before the precautions are
    discontinued
  • This is accomplished by placing the patient on a
    clean stretcher or in a clean Broda Chair while
    the room is being cleaned
  • Once this is done and all dedicated equipment is
    disinfected, then the precautions are
    discontinued alert Infection Control that this
    has occurred

24
Feedback
  • Rates of CDI for your facility and ward will be
    published and circulated quarterly or at defined
    intervals by Infection Prevention Control
  • We invite your
  • feedback

25
References
  • VIHA Infection Control Manual, pp. 2 14, 2 21
    and 2 28
  • Shea Position Paper, Clostridium
    Difficile-Associated Diarrhea Colitis,
    Infection Control Hospital Epidemiology, Vol
    16, No. 8, pp. 459 477
  • Infectious Diseases Microbiology, December
    2004, Vol 3, Issue 10
  • http//www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/c-difficile/index.html
  • New references needed! - dc
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