Title: Infection Control
1Infection Control
- Basic Medical Asepsis
- Standard Precautions
- Isolation
- Gerontologic Conciderations
- Management Guidlines
- Critical Thinking
2Learning Objectives
- Describe draw the six steps in the chain of
infection - Explain what is meant by the bodys natural
defenses - List and describe conditions that predispose
client to infection - Describe what is meant by the term nosocomial
infection and disscuss one intervention that will
help to prevent it - List the major organisms responsible for
nosocomial infections state the main purpose of
handwashing - Define the terms surgical asepsis and medical
asepsis - Describe the modes of transmission of HIV
- List precaution principles and explain their main
purpose - Describe the difference between the first and
second tier of precautions
3Chain of Infection
- For an infection to occur a chain of events must
take place - If the chain is broken through the implementation
of infection control measures, the infection is
less likely to occur
4The chain of infection involves six steps
- Infection Agent (Microorganism) whether the
microroganism is capable of producing an
infection depends on a number of circumstances - The virulence and number of organisms present
- The susceptibility of the host
- The existence of a portal of entry and the
affinity of the host to harbor the microorganism
5The chain of infection involves six steps-
Reservoir- Portal of Exit
- Reservoir must provide a favorable environment
for growth and multiplication of the
microorganism - These reservoirs include the respiratory,
gastrointestinal, reproductive and urinary tract
blood - Portal of Exit which allows the microorganism to
move from the reservoir to the host . The portal
of exit is directly associated with the
reservoir. For example if the resrvoir is the
respiratory tract, the portal of exit is through
sneezing, coughing , breathing or talking. If the
reservoir is blood, the portal of exit is through
an open wound, needle puncture, or nonintact skin
surface.
6The chain of infection involves six steps- Mode
of Transmission
- Mode of Transmission There are five routes of
transmission. The three primary routes are
contact, droplet, and air borne. Too lesser
routes are common vehicle(transmission by
contaminated items such as food, water, devices,
or equipment) and vector borne ( (transmitted by
vectors such as mosquitoes fleas, rats) - Contact transmission the most frequent source of
nosocomial infection, transmitted via two modes
direct and indirect contact
7The chain of infection involves six steps Mode of
transmission
- Direct contact involves a direct transmission,
body to body, and the physical transfer of
microorganisms from one infected person to
another e.g. Through sexual contact, kissing,
touch - It may occur when a health care worker touches a
client, gives a client a bath, or performs other
care activities - Indirect transmission involves contact with a
contaminated intermediate object such as a
needle, instrument, or dressing - This occurs when contaminated hands are not
washed and gloves are not changed between clients
8The chain of infection involves six steps
- Droplet transmission it occurs when droplets
from the infected source person are projected a
short distance to the hosts nasal mucosa , mouth
or conjunctiva - These droplets are not suspended in the air, so
it is not considered airborne transmission
9The chain of infection involves six steps- Mode
of transmission
- Air borne transmision occurs by dissemination
either small particle nuclei of evaporated
droplets or dust particles containing the
infectious agent - These agent can be dispersed widely by air
currents as with Legionnaires disease may be
inhaled by a susceptible host. - These microorganisms include mycobacterium
tuberculosis, rubeola and varicella viruses
10The chain of infection involves six steps- Portal
of Entry
- The most effective barrier to transmission of
microorganisms is an intact skin - For an infection to occur it must have a means of
entering the body - A disruption in the integrity of the skin
provides such a port of entry for microorganisms - Microorganisms also enter the body the same way
they leave the body. The respiratory system
provides a vailable portal of both exit and entry
11The chain of infection involves six steps-
Susceptible Host
- For an infection to occur a susceptible host is
needed- someone who is at risk this includes
the clients who are immunesuppressed, fatigue,
stressed, anemic, not immunized, poorly
nourished, - Those who have underlying diseases
- Hospitalized client with wounds, catheters, IVs
are at high risk for developing infections. - Clients who require invasive procedures, blood
specimen collections, surgery are in the high
risk category
12Barriers to infection
- An individuals ability to resist infection is
determined - by the status of the bodys defense mechanisms
and - by the persons general health
13Factors that contribute to susceptibility to
infection include
- Altered nutritional status
- Fatigue disease
- Drugs
- Metabolic functions
- Age
- Clients with severe underlying diseases are more
likely to develop nosocomial infections - The body is protected against infection by
immunities, by the inflammatory process, and by
anatomic barriers that include the skin and
mucous membranes
14Barriers to infection
- When the integrity of the skin or mucous membrane
is broken, both resident and transient flora or
bacteria have a direct route to the internal
tissue of the body - To prvent the spread of infection the bodys
internal defense mechanisms mobilize and begin
clearing and repairing the damage site - How quickly a wound heals depends on the degree
of vascularization in the injured area, the
location and cleanliness of the wound and the
degree of tissue damage
15Barriers to infection
- The second way the body resists infections is
through immunity , antitoxins, and vaccines - Natural immunity is inherited. Accquired immunity
occurs after an individual has been exposed to a
disease or infection or has been vaccinated
16Barriers to infection
- The third way the body resist infection is
through the inflammatory process - Inflammation involves use of metabolic energy
- , increased blood flow to the inflamed areas, in
many cases drainage of inflammatory debris to the
external environment
17Barriers to infection
- When an area becomes inflamed , cells at the site
activate the plasmin system, the clotting system,
the kinin system - The result of the activation of these system is
the release of histamine, which creates increase
vascular permeability around the injured site and
the release of chemotoxic agents, which summon
phagocytes into the vascular and tissue spaces - Phagocytes are W.B.C that combat and prevent
infection by ingesting harmful microorganism
18The bodys natural defences
- Almost any organism can be the cause of a
significant nosocomial infection - Some of variables that help determine which
organism emerges as the pathogen are the
virulence and number of organism - The exposure and attachment of the organisms to a
susceptible sitre and the duration of the
clients exposure to infectious challenge
19The bodys natural defences
- The following formula illustrates these variables
- Dose x virulence / host resistance infection
- Using this formula , the clients risk factors
can be evaluated. the inherent health and
immunologic status of the client are major
factors in determining whether an infection occur - Alterations in the skin barrier include any
physiologic break in the integrity of the skin - Intentional breaks are caused by the use of
percutaneous catheter and needles and by surgical
procedures. Unintentional causes of skin
breakdown include the development of presure
ulcers and traumatic wounds
20Conditions predisposing to infection
- Certain conditions and invasive techniques
predispose clients to infection because the
integrity of the skin is broken or the illness
itself establishes a climate favorable for the
infection process to occur. Among the most common
are surgical wounds, changes in the antibacterial
immune system or alteration in the respiratory
tract or genitourinary tract - Implant such as heart valves, prosthetic grafts,
or vascular grafts can lead to nosocomial
septicemias - The extensive use of IV therapy in clients has
increased infections dramatically
21Surgical wounds
- It has been documented that the longer a person
is hospitalized prior to the surgical procedure
the greater the risk of postsurgical infection - Other factors that influence infection rates are
duration of time in the operating room, time
surgery is done (between midnight and 800 A.M is
period of greatest risk), whether the client has
postsurgical drains in place, or if the surgery
enters a colonized or infected part of the body
22Surgical wounds
- It is useful for the nurse to be aware of
conditions that increase the risk of
postoperative infection - Risk reduction measures include preoperative
showering with an antiseptic solution, the use of
depilatory creams or the clipping of hair in lieu
of shaving the surgical site and keeping the
incision site covered with a dry sterile dressing
23Surgical wounds
- a wet dressing, through osmosis and diffusion ,
pulls organisms down into the wound from the
surface. This is particularly important during
the first 45 hours before the wound becomes
watertight. Research shows that preoperative
shaving results in disruption of normal flora on
the surface of the skin
24Antibacterial immune mechanism
- Three categories of abnormalities in
antibacterial immune mehanism - those affecting inflammatory responses,
- those affecting phagocytic functions and
- those affecting opsonins (humoral immunity)
- Anything that interfers with the migration of
phagocytic cells to the area of contamination or
with the physical contact of phagocytes and
bacteria enhances the development of an infection
e.g. Deficient blood supplies, the presence of
ischemia or dead tissue, sutured material,
foreign bodies, hematomas.
25Antibacterial immune mechanism
- Vasopressor agents, radiation injury, uremia,
severe nutritional deficiencies, and steroid
therapy inhibit the synthesis of antibodies and
other essential proteins - Clients with severe thermal injuries and severe
nutritional deficiencies have abnormalities
involving the number of neutrophils collected at
the site of an inflammatory response and defects
of bacterial chemotoxic capacity
26Antibacterial immune mechanism
- Client with Hodgkins disease have a specific
defect in cell-mediated immunity - Genetic inabilities to synthesize complement
components or specific antibodies can cause
abnormalities in opsonins. Burn client may have
complement inactivated by a circulating substance
released by the damaged tissue without
complement, lysis of cells and destruction of
bacteria cannot take place
27Respiratory Tract
- Alteration that facilitat infection include
endotracheal intubation, tracheostomy,
bronchotracheal suctioning, stasis due to poor
respiratory excursion for client on bed rest - Catheter placed directly in the trachea can force
pathogenic microorganisms into the respiratory
system - Catheter may damage the mucous lining of the
respiratory tract
28Genitourinary tract
- Instrumentation including catheterization of the
bladder and complicated obstetric delivery after
prolonges confinement in bed are two procedures
that introduce potentially pathogenic bacteria
into the genitourinary tract - Acute urinary tract infection and pyelonephritis
occur after the use of a catheter or cystoscope
29Invasive devices
- Nosocomial septicemias occur as a result of
significant alterations in normal host defences - Primary infection caused by direct introduction
of microorganisms into the bloodstream - Secondary arising from an infection at another
site such as the urinary tract - The most common site for a nosocomial infection
is the urinary tract - The use of IV therapy greatly increases the risk
of introducing harmful microorganisms
30Invasive devices
- Septicemia may be caused by introduction of
microorganisms from contaminated fluids, infected
venipuncture sites, foci of septic
thrombophlebitis as complication of using an
indwelling IV catheter - Infusion related sepsis is associated with
contaminated infusion fluid which may be
contaminated either during manufacturing
(intrensic contamination) or during hospital use
(extrensic contamination)
31Venipuncture Sites
- The wounds made by a percutaneous stick at the
venipuncture site may become colonized or
infected - This opening provides a reservoir for bacteria
that could move along the catheter into the
bloodstream - Site infections can be reduced by several
methods - Selecting a catheter appropriate to the size of
the vein - Avoiding sites near joints
- The performance of proper site preparation
- Maintaining regimen for site care
- Changing the site every 48-72 hours as well as
maintaining a closed system of therapy
32Total Parenteral Nutrition Therapy
- Means acheiving an anabolic state in clients who
would otherwise be unable to maintain normal
nitrogen balance - The hypertonic solution used with these client
supports the growth of a wide variety of
organisms especially fungus - Peripheral inserted central catheter lines may
not be changed for months - Meticulous site care must be done at least every
three days to preserve the site and aseptic
technique used when changing solution, tubing,
dressings and filters
33Implanted prosthetic devices
- Include artificial cardiac valves, synthetic
vascular grafts, orthopedic prosthetic joints,
neurosurgical shunts, cerebro spinal fluid
pressure monitoring devices - If the infection is not controlled, removal and
replacement of the prosthesis is indicated
34Nosocomial infections
- Are infections that are acquired while the client
is in the hospital - Infections that were not present or incubating at
the time of admission - Handwashing is the single most importan
intervention to prevent these infections
35Nosocomial infections
- Three major organisms responsible for the
majority of nosocomial infections - Clostridium difficile
- Methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA) - Vancomycin-resistant enterococcus (VRE)
36Nosocomial infections
- The most common organisms
- C.difficile is an anaerobic
- Gram-positive
- Spore-formig bacillus associated with infectious
diarrhea(CDAD) - 20-40 of hospitalized clients become colonized
within a few days of entering the hospital,
because it is often resistant to antimicrobial
therapy, it is able to proliferate in the
hospital setting
37Nosocomial pneumonia
- Affecting 40 of all critically ill or
immunosuppressed clients cause is gram-positive
staphylococcus that is methicillin resistant - Occurs in clients who have invasive procedures
such as intravenous or respiratory therapy
treatment or surgical procedures - Health care personnel easily transmit MRSA to
clients because it frequently colonizes skin - Vancomycin, the drug choice to treat MRSA, is
losing its effectiveness as a treatment
38Vancomycin-resistant enterococcus (VRE)
- A gram positive bacterium
- Normally found in flora of the gastrintestinal
tract - When this bacterium mutated and became resistant
to common antimicrobial therapies, it became a
major cause of nosocomial infections in the
hospital setting - Zyvox is the drug choics for VRE and MRSA
39Standard precaution
- 1985, universal precautions were instituted as a
result of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) - Blood and body fluid precautions were practiced
on all clients regardless of their potential
infectious state - 1987, body substance isolation (BSI)was proposed
- The intent to isolate all moist and potentially
infectious body - substances (blood, feces, urine, sputum, saliva,
wound drainage, other body fluids) from all the
clients, regardless of their infections status,
primarily through the use of gloves
40Standard precaution
- 1994, the CDC drafted new guidlines , contain
two tiers of precautions - The first tier, standard precautions, blends the
major features of universal precautions (blood
and body fluids precautions)and body substance
isolation into a single set of precautions to be
used for the care of all clients in hospitals
regardless of their diagnosis or presumed
infection status
41Standard precaution
- The new standard precautions apply to blood all
body fluids, secretions, and excretions, whether
or not they contain visible blood, non intact
skin, and mucous membranes - These precautions are designed to reduce the risk
of transmission of both recognized and
unrecognized sources of infection in hospitals
42Standard precaution
- As a result of the new category of standard
precautions, clients with diseases or conditions
that previously required category-specific or
disease specific precautions are now covered
under this category and do not require additional
precautions
43Standard precaution
- The second tier, transmission-based precautions
is designed only for the care of specified
clients - This tier reduces the disease-specific
precautions into three sets of precautions based
on routes of transmission - These categories are designed for clients
documented or suspected to be infected or
colonized with highly transmissible or
epidemiologically important pathogens for which
additional precautions must be used to interrupt
transmission to other in the hospital
44Types of transmission based precautions
- Airborne precautions reduce the risk of airborne
transmission of infection agents such as measles,
varicella, and tuberculosis - Droplet precautions are used to prevent the
transmission of diseases, such as meningitis,
scarlet fever, diphtheria, rubella and pertussis - Contact precaution are used for clients known or
susbected to have serious illness easily
transmitted by direct contact such as herpes
simplex, staphylococcal infections, hepatitis A
respiratory syncyntial virus, wound or skin
infection
45Fundamental principles
- 1. Handwashing
- 2. The use of gloves
- Mask, eye protection and face sheild in which
splashes or sprays could come in contact with
eyes and mucous membrane - Gown, should be worn whenever there is a risk of
contamination from blood , bloody fluids,
secretions or excretions - Linen, transport soiledlinens in a manner that
prevents skin and mucous membrane exposure,
contamination of clothing and transfer of
microorganisms to other clients and environment-
double-bagging linen before taking it to the
laundry facility - 3. The proper placement of clients in the
hospital to prevent the spread of microorganisms
to others or to the client - 4. The appropriate use of isolation equipment to
prevent the spread of microorganisms to health
care workers and other clients
46Occupational health and blood-borne pathogens
- Take precautions to prevent injuries caused by
needles, scalpels or other sharp instruments or
devices - Never recap used needles, purposely bend or break
needles by hand, remove needles from disposable
syringes or other handle needles directly - All such instrument should be placed in
puncture-resistant containers for disposal - Mouth pieces, resuscitation bags, or other
ventilation devices should be used as an
alternative to mouth to mouth resuscitation
47Client placement
- Clients who are at risk for contaminating the
environment or who are unable to maintain
appropriate hygiene or environmental control
should be placed in a private room
48Guidlines should be considered when providing
client care
- Health care workers who have open lesions, upper
respiratory infections, weeping dermatitis should
refrain from all direct client contact and from
handling client care equipment - Because of the risk of transmission of HIV and
hepatitis B virus (HBV) frother to fetus,
pregnant health workers should be especially
familiar with and strictly adher to precautions
to minimize risk of these viruses. - Currently pregnant health care workers are not
known to be at greater risk of contracting HIV or
HBV than other workers
49Health care workers protection
- Statistics from the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC)indicating that more than
800,000 needle sticks and sharp injuries were
being reported yearly - Needles stick injuries caused by hollow-borne
needles accounted for 86 of all reported
occupational HIV exposures - Nurses make up 24 of all the cases of HIV
infection among health care workers
50Health care workers protection
- More than 20 pathogens can be transmitted through
small amounts of blood - In addition to HIV and hepatitieB, syphilis,
varicella-zoster, and hepatitis c can be
transmitted vis this route - Hepatitis B is the most common infectious
disease transmitted through work-related exposure
to blood - About 5,100 health care workers become infected
with Hepatitis B each year
51Required Immunity Syndrome (AIDS)Epidemiology
and Modes of transmission
- The statistics are chilling CDC report from US
2001 79,3000 - 649,000 are males
- 134,845 are females
- 8,994 are children under 13
- Estimates are that will be 75 million HIV cases
in the top five industrial nations by 2010 - Aids the second leading killer of young men 24-44
y - Aids will be the third most common cause of death
in the united states
52Required Immunity Syndrome (AIDS)Epidemiology
and Modes of transmission
- Aids is the most serious epidemic facing the
modern world, making knowledge about it and
techniques for caring for the AIDS client
mandatory learning for all nurses. No one is
immune to AIDS - The two major risk groups continue to be
homosexual or bisexual men an IV drug abusers
which make up over 2/3 of all AIDS cases - The incidence of female African American cases
increased significantly among infected
heterosexuals (11)
53DefinitionsAIDS
- Defined by CDCas an HIV infection in a person
with a CD4 T-lymphocyte count of less than 200
cells/microliter(? L) of blood or a CD4
percentage of less than 14 - 26 conditions listed in the category C
- Cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis
- Kaposis sarcoma
- Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) which includes
the M.avium and M. Intracellulare organisms - M.Kansasii
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Pnemocytis carinii
- Recurrent pneumonia
54Health Care WorkersExposure to HIV
- The average risk for HIV-transmission after a
percutancous exposure to HIV-infected blood is
approximately 0.3 and after a mucous membrane
exposure is 0.09 - Risk factors for transmission by skin exposure
and fluid or tissue exposure has not been
quantified - CDC states 600,000-80,000 needle stick injuries
occur each year with potential risk of HIV
exposure - Conciderations that influence the use of
postexposure prophylaxis (PEP) how soon after
exposure PEP was begun and the believe that the
infection can be prevented or improved by the use
of the antiretroviral drugs
55Exposure definition
- Percutaneous injury, contact of mucous membrane,
or nonintact skin, or contact with intact skin
when the duration of contact is prolonged or
involves an extensive area, with the blood,
tissue or other body fluids. - Body fluids include semen, vaginal secretions, or
other body fluids contaminated with visible blood
(cerebrospinal, synovial, pleural, amniotic
fluids, peritoneal, pericardial) - There is no evidence that tears, sweat, nonbloody
urine or feces transmit HIV
56A recommendations for PEP
- 4-week regimen of two drugs (Zidovudine and
lamivudine) for most HIV exposures - An expanded regimen that includes the addition of
a protease inhibitor (indinavir or nelfinavir) is
recommended for HIV exposures that pose an
increased risk of transmission or when there is a
known or suspected resistance to one or more of
the antiretroviral agents recommended for PEP
57Tuberculosis
- Infectious disease caused by the tubercle
bacillus Mycobacterium tuberculosis - The main reservoir for the organism is the human
respiratory tract - Transmission occurs between individuals through
respiratory contact - The tubercle bacillus enters the respiratory
tract on droplets transmitted through productive
coughing from the infectd individual - Symptoms may occur 4-12 weeks after exposure or
may go unnoticed for many years
58Tuberculosis
- Active pulmonary tuberculosis has a slow,
insidious onset - The progression of the active disease and
symptoms of cough, weight loss, fever usually
occur within the first two years after the
infection - Latent infections which are asymptomatic are not
infectious and may last a lifetime - Without RX tuberculosis progresses to other body
sites - Disseminated tuberculosis occurs in many of the
body areas , not just the lungs - The incidence of tuberculosis cases has increased
greatly, due in large part of the AIDS epidemic
59Tuberculosis
- Immunosuppressed hosts are very vulnerable to the
bacillus - In addition to immunosuppressed individuals ,
other concidered at high risk for infection
include alcoholics IV drug abusers, individuals
who share a closed environment with the infected
individual, residents of instituations such as
long term care , foreign-born individuals from
countries with a high prevalence of tuberculosis,
such as Asia, Latin America, Africa, Mexico, the
former Soviet Union, low income populations who
are medically underserved
60Tuberculosis
- Early recognition and treatment of tuberculosis
must be intiated prompltly and isolation measures
instituted to prevent the spread of the disease - The purified protein derivative (PPD) skintest is
used to quickly identify the infection in the
absence of clinical stmptoms - Sputum specimens for AFB and culture and
sensitivity and chest x-rays are also orderedto
rule out TB - A PPD skin test is read 48-72 hours after the
injection - A positive skin test is indicated by an
induration of 5-10 mm at the site of injection
61Tuberculosis
- A two step method is now being used, particularly
with health care workers - The procedure involves the first PPD to be given
and read within 48-72 hours - If the PPD is negative or doubtful the PPD is
repeated in one week. - If the client has a positive reaction, he or she
is started on a prophylaxis regimen - A client who is known to be HIV positive with a
5 mm or larger duration at the site of the PPD
injection should be concidered positive for
tuberculosis
62Viral Hepatitis
- There are six forms of hepatitis, each form
differs in regard to incubation period, route of
transmission, antigenetic properties and
progression to chronicity - All forms of hepatitis produce an inflammatory
response to the liver which is characterized by
liver cell necrosis, inflammation and cell
regeneration - The three major forms of hepatitis are hepatitis
A virus (HAV), Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) and
Hepatitis C virus (HCV). - Hepatitis D virus (HDV) is not as common and
Hepatitis E (HEV) is rare - Hepatitis G Virus (HGV) is a recently isolated
blood-borne infectious agent transmitted by
needle-sticks and blood transfusions
63Viral Hepatitis
- Hepatitis A (HAV) is spread via the fecal-oral
route and sexual transmission - Poor sanitation and handwashing is a major source
of infection - Approximately 152,000 infections occur in the
United States each year. 99 of those infected
recover without any serious problems - HAVRIX vaccine is available to prevent HAV
- Once exposed to the infection or as a preventive
therapy, immune serum globulin is administered
intramuscularly
64Viral Hepatitis
- HepatitisB (HBV) is spread through infected blood
or body fluids and through two nonparenteral
routes, sexual contact and perinatal transmission - Contaminated needles, syringes, and blood
products are the most common mode of transmission - About 30 of the cases are spread through sexual
contact - 140,000 individuals are infected yearly in US
- 2-10 of adults become chronically infected with
HBV following an infection - HBV is 100 times more infectious than HIV
- HBV vaccine provides active immunity in over 95
of recipients - The two common vaccines are Engerix-B and
Recombivax HB
65Viral Hepatitis
- Hepatitis B immune globulin provides passive
immunity to individuals who have contact with
HBV-contaminated material - Hepatitis C (HCV) is transmitted primarily by
contact with contaminated blood and blood
products - 85 of those infected with HCV will remain
chronically infected - Chronic HCV infection is the main causal factor
for nearly one third of all liver transplants - Thre are three types of interferon used to treat
HCV - The CDC recommends the use of standard
precautions with clients known to have hepatitis - The precautions should be maintained for one week
after the onset of symptoms
66Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
- In 2003, there was a multi-country outbreak of a
virus suspected to be a mutated form of the
corona-virus (the common cold) - The specific SARS pathogen is not known
- There is speculation that this new virus has
jumped from animal to human, setting up the
possibility for a world-wide pandemic like 1918
swine or spanish flu that infected millions of
people around the world and killed more than 20
million - Jumping species from animal to human and being
able to transmit person to person is the worst
possible combination of events because it can
cause havoc in a non- immune population
67Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
- Because of this potential for disaster, the world
Health Organization issued a global alert when
this corona virus rapidly spread to 26 countries - The primary symptoms of SARS are malaise, aching
muscles, a persistent fever lt 38?, dry cough,
shortness of breath or breath difficulties,
normal WBC - People with these sympyoms who have recently
traveled to or been in the far east, are adviced
to see a doctor immediately - There is only supportive RX including oxygen and
ventilatory assistance when necessary
68Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS
- Total infection control precautions are essential
to prevent transmission - These would include goggles or glasses to protect
mucous membranes of the eyes, N95 mask, gown and
gloves - Washing hands carefully is essential
69What is Biohazard Waste
- Any solid or liquid waste that may present a
threat of infection - This could include laboratory waste, blood or
blood products, body fluids, absorbent material
saturated with blood or body fluids (either wet
or dry), discarded sharps, nonabsorbent
disposable devices (drains, excretions, gloves,
urine specimen)
70Storage of Biohazard Material
- Must be apprpriately sealed
- May be stored for 30 days
- Time starts when material is placed in the sharps
container or biohazard bag - All biohazard waste must be restricted, locked
up, or placed in a separate storage area - Must be labeled correctly so that there is a
tracking method for each bag, container - Labels should say medical waste and biohazard
and be dated when the bag was first placed in the
area
71Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- Is a blood-borne infective retrovirus that
invades the CD4 T-lymphocyte (immunity cells),
dublicates itself by means of that cell - Infection of HIV progresses to AIDS in at least
35 of those infected - Once the client has been diagnosed with HIV, the
usual approach to care includes evaluation of the
immune system and classification by CDC grouping
(A) asymptomatic, (B) acute symptomatic, and (C)
AIDS- indicator conditions
72Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- Identification and RX of infectious and
neoplastic complications, initiation of approved
antiretroviral therapy and concideration of
experimental measures are included in the
evaluation
73HIV is transmitted through high-risk behaviors or
other contact with the virus including
- Sexual contact with HIV-infected individuals
- Sharing needles with HIV-infected individuals
- Transfusions of blood or blood products from
infected individuals (not common today, but new
cases are still reported) - Babies who become infected from the mother before
or during birth, or through breast-feeding - Contact with contaminated needles, blood,
secretions, or excretions from an HIV infected
client
74Health Care WorkersExposure to HIV