Title: Infection acquired while in hospital
1 Introduction
Infection acquired while in hospital
Hospital infection
Infection acquired in the community 8-16
of hospital patients acquire infections while
in hospital
Hospital acquired infections are referred as
nosocomial infections Hospital staff
are at risk from diseases such as tuberculosis or
hepatitis
2 Types of hospital acquired infectios
1-
Surgical site infection (SSI)
2-
Urinary tract infection (Catheter-related
infection)
3- Respiratory tract infection (Ventilator-related
infection) 4- Blood stream
infection
5-
Gastrointestinal infection
6- Others
3 The infection cycle
Source Of Infection
Mode Of Transmission
The
Suscptible Host
SOURCE OF INFECTION It is the place
from which the infectious agents directly
gain access to the susceptible host
4 Source of infection
Endogenous Exogenous
The organisms belong to The
organisms are derived species of the normal
from a source other than
human flora
the effected host
5 Endogenous
source
Nares Skin
Oropharynx GIT S.
aureus Coagulase negative S. pneumonia
Enterobacteriace
staphylococci
Enterococci
Cl.
difficile
Candida
6 Exogenous source Persons
Patients
Attendants Nurses
Doctors Hospital environment
Air Water
Disinfectants Towels
Istruments
Cannulae Renal dialysis machine
Endoscopes Blood and its products
7 Mode Of Transmission
Direct
Contact Indirect
Common vehicle
Droplet Air-born
Droplet nuclei
Vector-born House flies
8 Contact transmission
Patient
---------- Patient a- Direct
Healthcare worker --------- Patient
Healthcare worker
Patient
---------------- Patient b- Indirect
Inadequately decontaminated
Patient -------------------- Patient
instruments c- Common Vehicle
Ventilator , Dialysis machine
9Air-born transmission Droplet
Droplet nuclei
short distance
long distance
Source------------Victims
Source-------------Victims
Less than 5 um in diameter
Produced from evaporated droplets
Remain suspended for long periods e.g
Group A streptococci e.g-M.
tuberculosis
10 Vector-born transmission Biological
vectors e.g- Mechanical transmission of
salmonella by house flies
11 self infection
Self infection Infected/colonized
other patient
Patient or staff member
or member of staff Cross infection
12 Environmental infection
air
Dust
Water
ventilators
Food
washbowls
urinals
Intravenous fluid equipment
Disinfectants
Solutions
13 Combination
Air/dust
Staph. sepsis
Nose
Self-infection
Wound infection
Hospital environment
contaminated with
hospital S. aureus
Via hands of a nurse
Wound infection
3rd. patient environmental infection
2nd. patient Cross infection
1st. Index case
14 Susceptible Host
Hospitalized patients are at high risk infections
due to
Intrinsic factors Extrinsic
factors
Surgical Advanced age
Irrational antibiotics
infection Loss of skin integrity
Inadequate sterilization
Malnutrition
Preparation of patient
Obesity Type of
procedure
Advanced age
Indwelling urinary
UTI Female
catheterization
Severity of the disease
15 Factors governing the occurrence of
hospital infection
The organism
Type
Virulence Dose Duration of exposure
The patient
General host defences
Local host defenses
Age
Intact skin or
mucosa Nature
of the disease Local
immunoglobulin A Control of
hospital infection
Sterilization Disinfection of contaminated
items Disposal of
infected rubbish or linen
Aseptic
techniques in the operating theater and the wards
The education of in
hospital hygiene
16- Important nosocomial infection pathogens
-
- Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA) -
-
- Methicillin-resistant
coagulase-negative staphylococci
-
-
- Vancomycin-resistant
enterococci (VRE)
-
-
- Penicillin-resistant
pneumococci -
-
17 Surgical wound
infection Causative
organisms
Streptococcus pyogenes
aureus
Staphylococcus
epidermidis
Gram negative
bacilli E. coli , Klebsiella ,
Pseudomonas , Proteus
Anaerobic
streptococci .
Clostridia (Cl.
Tetani , Cl. Welchii) Bacteroids
Anaerobic organisms
18 Prevention of surgical wound infection
Adequate sterilization
Sterile operating room
Surgical discipline
Preparation of
the patient
Proper surgical technique
Post-operative wound care
Proper use of antibiotics
19 Investigation of an outbreak of surgical wound
infection
Typing the infecting organism
The same surgical room
The same surgical team
Number of the isolated organisms
20 Infection control program
Hospital committee for I C
Infection control
organization
Infection control team
To
improve the quality of patient care Goal
To reduce the cost of
patient care
To control and prevent nosocomial
infection Objectives
To minimize of cross infection in hospitals
21 Elements of Infection Control program
1- surveillance and reporting
a- Patient infection
pre-employment screening
b- Healthcare workers infection Follow-up
of employment
Exposure to communicable diseases c-
Equipment, procedures and practices
d- Hospital environment
Notification e- Communicable
diseases Data collection
Analyses and reporting
222- Control and prevention
a- Teaching and
consulting
I C
polices and procedures b- Administrative
activities
Delegate
responsibilities
to I C team members
Antibiotic policy
c- Special studies
Study of risk factors
Cost-effectiveness studies
23- Anaerobic infections
-
-
Characteristics of anaerobic infection
- A foul odour pus
-
Abscesses of Lung
- Tend to form closed-space lesions
-
Abscesses of
brain -
-
Reduced blood supply - Favoured by
Necrotic tissues
-
Low oxidation-reduction potential -
Special collection methods
- It is essential to use
Transport media -
Sensitive techniques and media
-
- Mixed infection is common
24Classification of anaerobic bacteria
Spore-forming
Clostridium species
Bacteroides
Gm-negative bacilli
Fusobacterium
Actinomyces Non spore-forming Gm-positive
bacilli Eubacterium
Lactobacilli
Gm-positive cocci
Peptostreptococci
Gm-negative cocci Veillonella
25- Sites of important anaerobic infections
-
- Necrotizing pneumonia
lung abscess -
- Central nervous system
brain abscess -
- Intra-abdominal and pelvic abscesses
-
-
intrauterine abscess - Genital infections
- pelvic
abscess -
- Mouth
periodontal
infections -
- Upper respiratory tract
sinusitis and otitis media -
26- Diagnosis of anaerobic infections
-
-
Aspirates - Collection and transport of specimens
-
Tissues specimens - Direct microscopic examination
-
- Culture methods Anaerobic
conditions
-
Gm-staining reactions - Biochemical reactions
- Growth is identified by Gas-liquid
chromatography -
Specific antibodies , fluorescent
antibodies - DNA hybridization
techniques
27Antimicrobials for anaerobic infections
Clindamycin
Metronidazole
Chloramphenicol
Penicillin in high doses