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Title: Safer Healthcare Environments for Infection Prevention


1
Safer Healthcare Environments for Infection
Prevention
  • William A. Rutala, PhD, MPH
  • Director, Hospital Epidemiology, Occupational
    Health and Safety Professor of Medicine and
    Director, Statewide Program for Infection Control
    and Epidemiology
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA

2
DISCLOSURES
  • Consultation
  • Advanced Sterilization Products, Clorox
  • Honoraria (speaking)
  • Advanced Sterilization Products, 3M
  • Grants
  • CDC

3
Safer Healthcare Environments for Infection
Prevention
  • Describe how products, practices, principles and
    technology in the healthcare environment (air,
    water, surfaces and disinfection and
    sterilization) have been and continue to be
    integrated into practice to prevent patient
    exposure to pathogens
  • Discuss new technologies for the healthcare
    environment as well as future opportunities and
    challenges

4
Safer Healthcare Environments for Infection
PreventionNew Technologies and Future Challenges
  • Reprocessing reusable medical/surgical
    instruments
  • Hospital surfaces
  • Water
  • Air

5
disinfectionandsterilization.org
6
Safer Healthcare Environments for Infection
PreventionNew Technologies and Future Challenges
  • Reprocessing reusable medical/surgical
    instruments
  • Hospital surfaces
  • Water
  • Air

7
DISINFECTION AND STERILIZATION
  • EH Spaulding believed that how an object will be
    disinfected depended on the objects intended use
  • CRITICAL - objects which enter normally sterile
    tissue or the vascular system or through which
    blood flows should be sterile
  • SEMICRITICAL - objects that touch mucous
    membranes or skin that is not intact require a
    disinfection process (high-level
    disinfectionHLD) that kills all microorganisms
    but high numbers of bacterial spores
  • NONCRITICAL - objects that touch only intact skin
    require low-level disinfection

8
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9
New Trends in Sterilization of Patient Equipment
  • Alternatives to ETO-CFC
  • ETO-CO2, ETO-HCFC, 100 ETO
  • New Low Temperature Sterilization Technology
  • Hydrogen Peroxide Gas Plasma-most common
  • Vaporized hydrogen peroxide-limited clinical use
  • Ozone-limited clinical use

10
Rapid Readout BIs for Steam Now Require a 1-3h
Readout Compared to 24-48h
11
Attest Super Rapid Readout Biological
IndicatorsCommercially available in early 2013
  • 1491 BI (blue cap)
  • Monitors 270F and 275F gravity displacement
    steam sterilization cycles
  • 30 minute result (from 1 hour)
  • 1492V BI (brown cap)
  • Monitors 270F and 275F dynamic-air-removal
    (pre-vacuum) steam sterilization cycles
  • 1 hour result (from 3 hours)

12
DISINFECTION AND STERILIZATION
  • EH Spaulding believed that how an object will be
    disinfected depended on the objects intended use
  • CRITICAL - objects which enter normally sterile
    tissue or the vascular system or through which
    blood flows should be sterile
  • SEMICRITICAL - objects that touch mucous
    membranes or skin that is not intact require a
    disinfection process (high-level
    disinfectionHLD) that kills all microorganisms
    but high numbers of bacterial spores
  • NONCRITICAL - objects that touch only intact skin
    require low-level disinfection

13
High-Level Disinfection of Semicritical Objects
  • Exposure Time gt 8m-45m (US), 20oC
  • Germicide
    Concentration_____
  • Glutaraldehyde
    gt 2.0
  • Ortho-phthalaldehyde
    0.55
  • Hydrogen peroxide
    7.5
  • Hydrogen peroxide and peracetic acid
    1.0/0.08
  • Hydrogen peroxide and peracetic acid
    7.5/0.23
  • Hypochlorite (free chlorine)
    650-675 ppm
  • Accelerated hydrogen peroxide 2.0
  • Peracetic acid 0.2
  • Glut and isopropanol 3.4/26
  • Glut and phenol/phenate
    1.21/1.93___
  • May cause cosmetic and functional damage
    efficacy not verified

14
Automated Endoscope Reprocessors with Cleaning
Claim
  • Product Definition
  • Integrated double-bay AER
  • Eliminates manual cleaning
  • Uses New High-Level Disinfectant (HLD) with IP
    protection
  • Single-shot HLD
  • Automated testing of endoscope channels and
    minimum effective concentration of HLD
  • Incorporates additional features (LAN, LCD
    display)
  • Eliminates soil and microbes equivalent to
    optimal manual cleaning. BMC ID 2010 10200

15
DISINFECTION AND STERILIZATIONRutala, Weber,
HICPAC. 2008. www.cdc.gov
  • EH Spaulding believed that how an object will be
    disinfected depended on the objects intended use
  • CRITICAL - objects which enter normally sterile
    tissue or the vascular system or through which
    blood flows should be sterile
  • SEMICRITICAL - objects that touch mucous
    membranes or skin that is not intact require a
    disinfection process (high-level
    disinfectionHLD) that kills all microorganisms
    but high numbers of bacterial spores
  • NONCRITICAL - objects that touch only intact skin
    require low-level disinfection

16
LOW-LEVEL DISINFECTION FOR NONCRITICAL EQUIPMENT
AND SURFACES
  • Exposure time gt 1
    min
  • Germicide Use Concentration
  • Ethyl or isopropyl alcohol 70-90
  • Chlorine 100ppm (1500 dilution)
  • Phenolic UD
  • Iodophor UD
  • Quaternary ammonium UD
  • Improved hydrogen peroxide (HP) 0.5, 1.4
  • __________________________________________________
    __
  • UDManufacturers recommended use dilution

17
IMPROVED HYDROGEN PEROXIDE (HP) SURFACE
DISINFECTANT
  • Advantages
  • 30 sec -1 min bactericidal and virucidal claim
    (fastest non-bleach contact time)
  • 5 min mycobactericidal claim
  • Safe for workers (lowest EPA toxicity category,
    IV)
  • Benign for the environment noncorrosive surface
    compatible
  • One step cleaner-disinfectant
  • No harsh chemical odor
  • EPA registered (0.5 RTU, 1.4 RTU, wet wipe)
  • Disadvantages
  • More expensive than QUAT

18
BACTERICIDAL ACTIVITY OF DISINFECTANTS (log10
reduction) WITH A CONTACT TIME OF 1m WITH/WITHOUT
FCS. Rutala et al. ICHE. In press
Improved hydrogen peroxide is significantly
superior to standard HP at same concentration and
superior or similar to the QUAT tested
Organism IHP-0.5 0.5 HP IHP Cleaner-Dis 1.4 1.4 HP 3.0 HP QUAT
MRSA gt6.6 lt4.0 gt6.5 lt4.0 lt4.0 5.5
VRE gt6.3 lt3.6 gt6.1 lt3.6 lt3.6 4.6
MDR-Ab gt6.8 lt4.3 gt6.7 lt4.3 lt4.3 gt6.8
MRSA, FCS gt6.7 NT gt6.7 NT lt4.2 lt4.2
VRE, FCS gt6.3 NT gt6.3 NT lt3.8 lt3.8
MDR-Ab, FCS gt6.6 NT gt6.6 NT lt4.1 gt6.6
19
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20
Hospital Privacy Curtains(sprayed grab area 3x
from 6-8 with 1.4 IHP and allowed 2 minute
contact sampled)
21
Decontamination of Curtains with Activated HP
(1.4)Rutala, Gergen, Weber. 2012
CP for Before Disinfection CFU/5 Rodacs (Path) After Disinfection CFU/5 Rodacs (Path) Reduction
MRSA 330 (10 MRSA) 21(0 MRSA) 93.6
MRSA 186 (24 VRE) 4 (0 VRE) 97.9
MRSA 108 (10 VRE) 2 (0 VRE) 98.2
VRE 75 (4 VRE) 0 (0 VRE) 100
VRE 68 (2 MRSA) 2 (0 MRSA) 97.1
VRE 98 (40 VRE) 1 (0 VRE) 99.0
MRSA 618 (341 MRSA) 1 (0 MRSA) 99.8
MRSA 55 (1 VRE) 0 (0 MRSA) 100
MRSA, VRE 320 (0 MRSA, 0 VRE) 1 (0 MRSA, 0 VRE) 99.7
MRSA 288 (0 MRSA) 1 (0 MRSA) 99.7
Mean 2146/10215 (432/1044) 33/103 (0) 98.5
All isolates after disinfection were Bacillus sp
22
Safer Healthcare Environments for Infection
PreventionNew Technologies and Future Challenges
  • Reprocessing reusable medical/surgical
    instruments
  • Hospital surfaces (increasing evidence to support
    the contribution of the environment to disease
    transmission)
  • Water
  • Air

23
HAZARDS IN THE HOSPITAL
MRSA, VRE,C. difficile, Acinetobacter
spp., norovirus
Endogenous flora 40-60 Cross-infection (hands)
20-40 Antibiotic driven 20-25 Other
(environment) 20
Weinstein RA. Am J Med 199191(suppl 3B)179S
24
THE ROLE OF THE ENVIRONMENT IN DISEASE
TRANSMISSION
  • Over the past decade there has been a growing
    appreciation that environmental contamination
    makes a contribution to HAI with MRSA, VRE,
    Acinetobacter, norovirus and C. difficile
  • Surface disinfection practices are currently not
    effective in eliminating environmental
    contamination
  • Inadequate terminal cleaning of rooms occupied by
    patients with MDR pathogens places the next
    patients in these rooms at increased risk of
    acquiring these organisms

25
TRANSMISSION MECHANISMS INVOLVING THE SURFACE
ENVIRONMENT
Rutala WA, Weber DJ. InSHEA Practical
Healthcare Epidemiology (Lautenbach E, Woeltje
KF, Malani PN, eds), 3rd ed, 2010.
26
ACQUISITION OF MRSA ON HANDS AFTER CONTACT WITH
ENVIRONMENTAL SITES
27
TRANSFER OF MRSA FROM PATIENT OR ENVIRONMENT TO
IV DEVICE AND TRANSMISSON OF PATHOGEN
28
ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION LEADS TO HAIsWeber,
Rutala, Miller et al. AJIC 201038S25
  • Microbial persistence in the environment
  • In vitro studies and environmental samples
  • MRSA, VRE, AB, CDI
  • Frequent environmental contamination
  • MRSA, VRE, AB, CDI
  • HCW hand contamination
  • MRSA, VRE, AB, CDI
  • Relationship between level of environmental
    contamination and hand contamination
  • CDI

29
ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION LEADS TO HAIs Weber,
Rutala, Miller et al. AJIC 201038S25
  • Person-to-person transmission
  • Molecular link
  • MRSA, VRE, AB, CDI
  • Housing in a room previously occupied by a
    patient with the pathogen of interest is a risk
    factor for disease
  • MRSA, VRE, CDI
  • Improved surface cleaning/disinfection reduces
    disease incidence
  • MRSA, VRE, CDI

30
KEY PATHOGENS WHERE ENVIRONMENTIAL SURFACES PLAY
A ROLE IN TRANSMISSION
  • MRSA
  • VRE
  • Acinetobacter spp.
  • Clostridium difficile
  • Norovirus
  • Rotavirus
  • SARS

31
C. difficile Environmental ContaminationRutala,
Weber. SHEA. 3rd Edition. 2010
  • Frequency of sites found contaminated10-gt50
    from 13 studies-stethoscopes, bed frames/rails,
    call buttons, sinks, hospital charts, toys,
    floors, windowsills, commodes, toilets,
    bedsheets, scales, blood pressure cuffs, phones,
    door handles, electronic thermometers,
    flow-control devices for IV catheter, feeding
    tube equipment, bedpan hoppers
  • C. difficile spore load is low-7 studies assessed
    the spore load and most found lt10 colonies on
    surfaces found to be contaminated. Two studies
    reported gt100 one reported a range of 1-gt200
    and one study sampled several sites with a sponge
    and found 1,300 colonies C. difficile.

32
FREQUENCY OF ACQUISITION OF MRSA ON GLOVED HANDS
AFTER CONTACT WITH SKIN AND ENVIRONMENTAL SITES
No significant difference on contamination rates
of gloved hands after contact with skin or
environmental surfaces (40 vs 45 p0.59)
Stiefel U, et al. ICHE 201132185-187
33
Risk of Acquiring MRSA and VREfrom Prior Room
Occupants
  • Admission to a room previously occupied by an
    MRSA-positive patient or VRE-positive patient
    significantly increased the odds of acquisition
    for MRSA and VRE (although this route is a minor
    contributor to overall transmission). Arch Intern
    Med 20061661945.
  • Prior environmental contamination, whether
    measured via environmental cultures or prior room
    occupancy by VRE-colonized patients, increases
    the risk of acquisition of VRE. Clin Infect Dis
    200846678.
  • Prior room occupant with CDAD is a significant
    risk for CDAD acquisition. Shaughnessy et al.
    ICHE 201132201

34
A Targeted Strategy for C. difficile Orenstein
et al. 2011. ICHE321137
Daily cleaning with bleach wipes on high
incidence wards reduced CDI 85 (24.2 to 3.6
cases/10,000 patient days and prolonged median
time between HA CDI from 8 to 80 days
35
Thoroughness of Environmental CleaningCarling et
al. ECCMID, Milan, Italy, May 2011
gt110,000 Objects
Mean 32
36
WipesCotton, Disposable, Microfiber
Wipe should have sufficient wetness to achieve
the disinfectant contact time. Discontinue use
of a disposable wipe if it no longer leaves the
surface visibly wet for gt 1m
37
SURFACE DISINFECTIONEffectiveness of Different
Methods, Rutala et al. 2012
Technique (with cotton) MRSA Log10 Reduction (QUAT)
Saturated cloth 4.41
Spray (10s) and wipe 4.41
Spray, wipe, spray (1m), wipe 4.41
Spray 4.41
Spray, wipe, spray (until dry) 4.41
Disposable wipe with QUAT 4.55
Control detergent 2.88
38
EFFECTIVENESS OF DISINFECTANTS AGAINST MRSA AND
VRE
Rutala WA, et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol
20002133-38.
39
Mean proportion of surfaces disinfected at
terminal cleaning is 32
  • Terminal cleaning methods ineffective (products
    effective practices deficient surfaces not
    wiped) in eliminating epidemiologically
    important pathogens

40
ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION LEADS TO HAIs
  • There is increasing evidence to support the
    contribution of the environment to disease
    transmission
  • This supports comprehensive disinfecting regimens
    (goal is not sterilization) to reduce the risk of
    acquiring a pathogen from the healthcare
    environment

41
MONITORING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF CLEANINGCooper
et al. AJIC 200735338
  • Visual assessment-not a reliable indicator of
    surface cleanliness
  • ATP bioluminescence-measures organic debris
    (each unit has own reading scale, lt250-500 RLU)
  • Microbiological methods-lt2.5CFUs/cm2-pass can be
    costly and pathogen specific
  • Fluorescent marker

42
TERMINAL ROOM CLEANING DEMONSTRATION OF IMPROVED
CLEANING
  • Evaluated cleaning before and after an
    intervention to improve cleaning
  • 36 US acute care hospitals
  • Assessed cleaning using a fluorescent dye
  • Interventions
  • Increased education of environmental service
    workers
  • Feedback to environmental service workers
  • Regularly change dotted items to prevent
    targeting objects

Carling PC, et al. ICHE 2008291035-41
43
NEW APPROACHES TO ROOM DECONTAMINATION
44
ROOM DECONTAMINATION UNITSRutala, Weber. ICHE.
201132743
45
UV Room Decontamination
  • Fully automated, self calibrates, activated by
    hand-held remote
  • Room ventilation does not need to be modified
  • Uses UV-C (254 nm range) to decontaminate
    surfaces
  • Measures UV reflected from walls, ceilings,
    floors or other treated areas and calculates the
    operation time to deliver the programmed lethal
    dose for pathogens.
  • UV sensors determines and targets highly-shadowed
    areas to deliver measured dose of UV energy
    (12,000µWs/cm2 bacteria)
  • After UV dose delivered, will power-down and
    audibly notify the operator
  • Reduces colony counts of pathogens by gt99.9
    within 20-25m

46
EFFECTIVENESS OF UV ROOM DECONTAMINATION
Rutala WA, et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol.
2010311025-1029.
47
HP SYSTEMS FOR ROOM DECONTAMINATION
48
HP SYSTEMS FOR DECONTAMINATION OF THE HOSPITAL
ENVIRONMENT Falagas, et al. J Hosp Infect.
201178171.
Reliable biocidal activity against a wide range
of pathogens
Author, Year HP System Pathogen Before HPV After HPV Reduction
French, 2004 VHP MRSA 61/85-72 1/85-1 98
Bates, 2005 VHP Serratia 2/42-5 0/24-0 100
Jeanes, 2005 VHP MRSA 10/28-36 0/50-0 100
Hardy, 2007 VHP MRSA 7/29-24 0/29-0 100
Dryden, 2007 VHP MRSA 8/29-28 1/29-3 88
Otter, 2007 VHP MRSA 18/30-60 1/30-3 95
Boyce, 2008 VHP C. difficile 11/43-26 0/37-0 100
Bartels, 2008 HP dry mist MRSA 4/14-29 0/14-0 100
Shapey, 2008 HP dry mist C. difficile 48/203-24 7 7/203-3 0.4 88
Barbut, 2009 HP dry mist C. difficile 34/180-19 4/180-2 88
Otter, 2010 VHP GNR 10/21-48 0/63-0 100
49
ROOM DECONTAMINATION WITH HPV
  • Study design
  • Before and after study of HPV
  • Outcome
  • C. difficile incidence
  • Results
  • HPV decreased environmental contamination with C.
    difficile (plt0.001), rates on high incidence
    floors from 2.28 to 1.28 cases per 1,000 pt days
    (p0.047), and throughout the hospital from 1.36
    to 0.84 cases per 1,000 pt days (p0.26)

Boyce JM, et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol.
200829723-729.
50
UV ROOM DECONTAMINATION ADVANTAGES AND
DISADVANTAGES
  • Advantages
  • Reliable biocidal activity against a wide range
    of pathogens
  • Surfaces and equipment decontaminated
  • Room decontamination is rapid (15 min) for
    vegetative bacteria
  • HVAC system does not need to be disabled and room
    does not need to be sealed
  • UV is residual free and does not give rise to
    health and safety concerns
  • No consumable products so operating costs are low
    (key cost acquisition)
  • Disadvantages
  • No studies evaluating whether use reduces HAIs
  • Can only be done for terminal disinfection (i.e.,
    not daily cleaning)
  • All patients and staff must be removed from room
  • Substantial capital equipment costs
  • Does not remove dust and stains which are
    important to patients/visitors
  • Sensitive use parameters (e.g., UV dose delivered)

Rutala WA, Weber DJ. ICHE 201132743-747
51
HP ROOM DECONTAMINATION ADVANTAGES AND
DISADVANTAGES
  • Advantages
  • Reliable biocidal activity against a wide range
    of pathogens
  • Surfaces and equipment decontaminated
  • Demonstrated to decrease disease incidence (C.
    difficile)
  • Residual free and does not give rise to health
    and safety concerns (aeration units convert HPV
    into oxygen and water)
  • Useful for disinfecting complex equipment and
    furniture
  • Disadvantages
  • Can only be done for terminal disinfection (i.e.,
    not daily cleaning)
  • All patients and staff must be removed from room
  • Decontamination takes approximately 3-5 hours
  • HVAC system must be disabled and the room sealed
    with tape
  • Substantial capital equipment costs
  • Does not remove dust and stains which are
    important to patients/visitors
  • Sensitive use parameters (e.g., HP concentration)

Rutala WA, Weber DJ. ICHE (In press)
52
(No Transcript)
53
Rapid Hospital Room Decontamination Using UV
Light With a Nanostructured Reflective Coating
  • Assessed the time required to kill HAI pathogens
    in a room with standard white paint (3-7 UV
    reflective) versus walls coated with an agent
    formulated to be reflective to UV-C wavelengths
    (65 UV reflective)
  • Coating uses nanoscale metal oxides whose crystal
    structures are reflective to UV-C
  • Coating is white in appearance and can be applied
    with a brush or roller in the same way as any
    common interior latex paint
  • Cost to coat walls used in this study was
    estimated to be lt300.

54
UV Reflective CoatingRutala, Gergen, Tande,
Weber. 2012
With the nanoscale reflective coating, cycle
times were 5-10m (80 reduction) which would
substantially reduce the turnover time of the room
Line-of-Sight MRSA w/coating MRSA no coating C. difficile w/coating C. difficile no coating
Cycle Time 5m03s 25m13s 9m24s 43m42s
Direct 4.70 (n42) 4.72 (n33) 3.28 (n39) 3.42 (n33)
Indirect 4.45 (n28) 4.30 (n27) 2.42 (n31) 2.01 (n27)
Total 4.60 (n70) 4.53 (n60) 2.91 (n70) 2.78 (n60)
55
METHODS TO IMPROVE DISINFECTIONOF ENVIRONMENTAL
SURFACES
  • Enhanced environmental cleaning and disinfection
  • Improved education of environmental service
    workers
  • Use of checklists
  • Monitoring of cleaning with fluorescent dye,
    ATPase, aerobic plate counts
  • No touch terminal disinfection
  • UV light
  • Hydrogen peroxide Vapor or aerosol
  • Portable steam dispensers
  • Self disinfecting surfaces (or persistent
    antimicrobials)

56
RATIONALE FOR DEVELOPMENTOF SELF DISINFECTING
SURFACES
  • Unlike improved environmental cleaning does not
    require a ongoing behavior change or education of
    personnel
  • Self-sustaining once in place
  • Allows continued disinfection (may eliminate the
    problem of recontamination), unlike no touch
    methods which can only be used for terminal
    disinfection
  • Most hospital surfaces have a low bioburden of
    pathogens (i.e., lt100 per cm2)
  • Once purchased might not have a maintenance cost

57
SELF DISINFECTING SURFACES
  • Surface impregnated with a heavy metal
  • Silver
  • Copper
  • Surface impregnated with a germicide
  • Triclosan
  • Antimicrobial surfactant/quaternary ammonium
    salt?
  • Organosilane products?
  • Altered topography
  • Sharklet pattern
  • Light-activated antimicrobial coating

Weber DJ, Rutala WA. ICHE 20123310-13
58
SELF DISINFECTING SURFACES
Copper coated overbed table
Sharklet Pattern
Triclosan pen
Antimicrobial effects of silver
59
IN VITRO EFFECTIVENESS OF A SILVER COATING
AGAINST BACTERIAL CHALLENGE
  • Study design In vitro study
  • Study agent Surfacine (10 ?g/cm2 silver
    iodide)
  • Methods Surface coated with Surfacine and then
    challenged with VRE
  • Results
  • Antimicrobial activity retained despite repeated
    dry wiping or wiping with a QUAT

Rutala WA, Weber DJ. Emerg Infect Dis 20017348
60
Role of Copper in Reducing Hospital Environmental
ContaminationCasey et al. 2010 7472-77
61
COPPER VERSUS STANDARD ITEMSA CROSS-OVER STUDY
OF CONTAMINATION
  • Study To assess antimicrobial activity of
    copper coated objects
  • Method Cross-over study on an acute medical ward
  • Results Copper reduced aerobic counts by
    90-100
  • Toilet seat 87 v 2/ cm2 push plate 2 v 0/cm2
    hot water tap handle 7.5 v 0/cm2

Casey AL, et al. J Hosp Infect 20107472-77
62
Efficacy of Copper Alloy in Clinical Environment
  • Copper surfaces demonstrated to be cidal to HA
    pathogen
  • Limitations
  • Cost of purchasing and installing copper items
  • Reduction of microbial contamination is modest
    (i.e., 1 log10)
  • How soiling, cleaning, etc affect properties not
    studied
  • Impractical/impossible to coat all environmental
    surfaces and medical devices that could lead to
    hand contamination
  • No studies whether use reduces HAI rates

63
SURFACE DISINFECTANTS PERSISTENCE
Surface disinfectant Persistence
Phenolic No
Quaternary ammonium compound Yes (with caveats)
Alcohol No
Hypochlorite No
Hydrogen peroxide No
64
QUATS AS SURFACE DISINFECTANTSWITH PERSISTENT
ACTIVITY
  • Study of computer keyboards Challenge with VRE
    or P. aeruginosa
  • Keys wiped with alcohol or quats (CaviWipes,
    Clorox Disinfecting Wipes, or Sani-Cloth Plus)
  • Persistent activity when undisturbed any contact
    will result in removal of the Quat and loss of
    persistent activity

Rutala WA, White MS, Gergen MF, Weber DJ. ICHE
200627372-77.
65
EFFICACY OF LIGHT-ACTIVATED ANTIMICROBIAL COATING
  • Germicide Silicone polymers containing
    photosensitizer methylene blue (MB) and Au
    nanoparticles
  • Results (exposure to 28W light)
  • Panel A Mean number of MRSA recovered after
    24hr incubation
  • Panel B Mean number of MRSA recovered after 6hr
    incubation

Reduction MB 99.33 AU 99.99
Reduction MB 56.51 AU 92.30
Ismail S, et al. ICHE 2011321130-32
66
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGESOF SELF DISINFECTING
SURFACES
  • Advantages
  • Passive (i.e., requires no additional maintenance
    once installed)
  • Effective throughout patient occupancy (i.e., not
    just at terminal disinfection)
  • Prevents recontamination
  • Depending on method may be manufactured in or
    applied by dipping, brushing or spraying
  • Disadvantages
  • No studies evaluating whether use reduces HAIs
  • Impossible to coat/cover all frequently touched
    surfaces with antimicrobial coating (e.g.,
    medical equipment, television remote, curtains)
  • Reduces but does not eliminate pathogenic
    microorganisms
  • Durability? Cost? (unknown)
  • Development of resistant pathogens (i.e., copper,
    silver)

67
Safer Healthcare Environments for Infection
PreventionNew Technologies and Future Challenges
  • Reprocessing reusable medical/surgical
    instruments
  • Hospital surfaces (increasing evidence to support
    the contribution of the environment to disease
    transmission)
  • Water
  • Air

68
Water and HealthcareMultiple Uses
CDC
CDC
69
Water-Related Pathogens and Their Disease
Transmission PathwaysExner et al. AJIC
33S26-40 2005
70
WATER RESERVOIRSRutala, Weber. ICHE 199718609
71
Water Wall Fountains and Electronic Faucets
72
Water Walls Linked to Legionnaires
  • Palmore et al. ICHE 200930764
  • 2 immunocompromised patients exposed to
    decorative fountain in radiation oncology
    isolates from patients and fountain identical
    disinfection with ozone, filter and weekly
    cleaning
  • Houpt et al. ICHE 201233185
  • Lab-confirmed Legionnaires disease was dx in 8
    patients 6 had exposure to decorative fountain
    (near main entrance to hospital) high counts of
    Legionella pneumophila 1 despite disinfection and
    maintenance

73
Water Walls and Decorative Water Fountains
  • Present unacceptable risk in hospitals serving
    immunocompromised patients (even with standard
    maintenance and sanitizing methods)

74
Electronic FaucetsA Possible Source of
Nosocomial Infection?
75
Electronic Faucets
  • Conserve water
  • Conserve energy
  • Hygienic
  • Hands free
  • Barrier free

76
Electronic (E) vs Handle-Operated (HO) Faucets
  • 100 E vs 30 HO Legionella (no cases). Halabi et
    al. JHI 200149117
  • Significant difference HPC levels between brand A
    (32) and B (8) E compared to HO (11).
    Hargreaves et al. 2001 22202
  • No difference in P. aeruginosa. Assadian et al.
    ICHE. 20022344.
  • 73 E samples did not meet water std vs 0 HO
  • 29 of water samples from E and 1 from HO
    yielded P. aeruginosa. Merrer et al. Intensive
    Care Med 2005311715
  • 95 E grew Legionella compared to 45 HO
    (water-disruption events). Syndor et al. ICHE
    33235

77
Issues Associated with Electronic Faucets
  • A longer distance between the valve and the tap,
    resulting in a longer column of stagnant, warm
    water, which favors production of biofilms
  • Reduced water flow reduced flushing effect
    (growth favored)
  • Valves and pipes made of plastic (enhances
    adhesion P. aeruginosa)

78
Prevention Measures
  • Electronic faucets constructed so they do not
    promote the growth of microorganisms
  • A potential source of nosocomial pathogens
  • No guideline (but some have recommended) to
    remove electronic faucets from at-risk patient
    care areas (BMTU)
  • Some have recommended periodic monitoring of
    water samples for growth of Legionella
  • More data are needed to establish role in HAIs

79
Safer Healthcare Environments for Infection
PreventionNew Technologies and Future Challenges
  • Reprocessing reusable medical/surgical
    instruments
  • Hospital surfaces (increasing evidence to support
    the contribution of the environment to disease
    transmission)
  • Water
  • Air

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MOST COMMON PATHOGENS ASSOCIATED WITH
CONSTRUCTION OR RENOVATION OUTBREAKS
  • Aspergillus spp. (by far most important)
  • Zygomycetes
  • Other fungi
  • Miscellaneous

83
UNDERLYING CONDITIONS IN PATIENTS WITH NOSOCOMIAL
ASPERGILLOSIS
No. of Patients Mortality ()
Hematologic malignancy 299 57.6
Solid organ transplant Renal transplant Liver transplant 36 8 55.9
Other immunocompromised High-dose steroid therapy Neonates Other malignancy Chronic lung disease ICU patients (high-risk) No exact classification possible 15 5 4 2 2 49 52.3
Patients without severe immunodeficiency Thoracic surgery Cataract surgery ICU patients (low risk) Other surgery patients 25 5 5 3 39.4
TOTAL 458 55.0
84
NOSOCOMIAL ASPERGILLOSISIN OUTBREAK SETTINGS
Vonberg R-P, Gastmeier P. J Hosp Infect
200663246-54
85
RELEVANT GUIDELINES
  • 2003 Guidelines for preventing
    health-care-associated pneumonia (HICPAC)
  • 2003 Guidelines for environmental infection
    control in health-care facilities (CDC, HICPAC)
  • 2000 Guidelines for preventing opportunistic
    infections among hematopoietic stem cell
    transplant recipients (CDC, IDSA, ASBMT)
  • American Institute of Architects Academy of
    Architecture for Health. Guidelines for Design
    and Construction of Hospital and Health Care
    Facilities , 2006. (telephone 888-272-4115)
  • Construction and Renovation, 3rd Edition ,and
    Infection Prevention for Construction DVD,
    Association for Professionals in Infection
    Control and Epidemiology, 2007 (173 member
    price ) APIC store www.apic.org/
  • APIC Text of Infection Control and Epidemiology,
    3rd ed. Association for Professionals in
    Infection Control and Epidemiology, 2009.
    www.apic.org/
  • ASHRAE - American Society of Heating,
    Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers

86
INFECTION CONTROL RISK ASSESSMENT (ICRA)
  • ICRA is an multidisciplinary, organizational,
    documented process that after considering the
    facilitys patient population and type of
    construction project (non-invasive to major
    demolition)
  • Focuses on reduction of risk from infection
  • Acts through phases of facility planning, design,
    construction, renovation, facility maintenance
    and
  • Coordinates and weights knowledge about
    infection, infectious agents, type of
    construction project and care environment
    permitting the organization to anticipate
    potential impact

87
STEP 1IDENTIFY TYPE OF CONSTRUCTION PROJECT
http//www.premierinc.com/quality-safety/tools-ser
vices/safety/topics/construction/downloads/ICRA- M
atrixColorRevised-091109.pdf
88
STEP 1IDENTIFY TYPE OF CONSTRUCTION PROJECT
89
STEP 2IDENTIFY PATIENT RISK
90
STEP 3MATCH RISK GROUP WITH CONSTRUCTION TYPE
91
INFECTION CONTROL BY CLASS
92
INFECTION CONTROL BY CLASS
During construction
After construction
93
INFECTION CONTROL BY CLASS
During construction
After construction
94
Portable HEPA UnitsRutala et al. ICHE 199516391
Can rapidly reduce levels of airborne particles
(0.3µ, for example, 90 in 5 m) used in
construction worksite and reduce risk to TB
exposure.
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Safer Healthcare Environments for Infection
PreventionNew Technologies and Future Challenges
  • Reprocessing reusable medical/surgical
    instruments
  • Hospital surfaces
  • Water
  • Air

97
CONCLUSIONS
  • New sterilization, high-level disinfection and
    low-level disinfection technologies/practices/prod
    ucts are effective
  • The contaminated surface environment in hospital
    rooms is important in the transmission of
    healthcare-associated pathogens (MRSA, VRE, C.
    difficile)
  • Effective surface disinfection essential to
    eliminate the environment as a source for
    transmission of HA pathogens.
  • New methods of reducing transmission of these
    pathogens may include improved room
    cleaning/disinfection, no-touch methods (UV,
    HP), and self-disinfecting surfaces
  • Water reservoirs of HA pathogens (e.g., water
    walls) may present unacceptable risk to high-risk
    patients
  • Use of Infection Control Risk Assessment is a
    logical method to reduce risks associated with
    construction and renovation projects

98
disinfectionandsterilization.org
99
THANK YOU!
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