Infection Control PPT Wards
Infection Control PPT Wards
CONTROL
INTRODUCTION
“Hospitals are intended to heal the sick, but they are also
sources of infection.
Normally sterile
sputum
Streptococcus
Lower
pneumoniae,
respiratory
tract Haemophilus influenza
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Characteristics of the Organism
MAGNITUDE OF PROBLEM
Nosocomial infections occur worldwide
• WHO survey in 2002 in 55 hospitals of 14 countries
(Both Developed and Resource poor countries)
representing 4 WHO regions
Europe 7.7%
Eastern Mediterranean 11.8%
South East Asia 10%
West Pacific 9%
Average of 8.7% of hospital patients had
nosocomial infections
MAGNITUDE OF PROBLEM
• CDC (2007) --2.2 million patients of HAI in USA
with 103,000 deaths annually. (about 10%of
population) costing 5-6 billion annually. 4 th leading
cause of death.
• India- 7.8 million annually.
• India-according to HIS 2007- 10-30%.
Highest prevalence of Nosocomial infections
occurs in ICU, Acute surgical, Orthopaedic wards.
Higher among patients with old age, underlying
disease, chemotherapy
Types of Device associated
HAI
Catheter associated Laboratory Confirmed
Bloodstream infections (LCBI)
Nebulisation kit.
INVASIVE DEVICES
SHORT TERM USE OR TEMPORARY USE.
IABP catheter.
Pacing electrode.
Central line(CVP catheter).
Swan-Ganz catheter.
Chest tubes.
Endotracheal tube.
Tracheostomy tube.
IV canula, arterial canula.
Foleys catheter.
INVASIVE DEVICES.
LONG TERM USE.
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Standard Precautions
Standard Precautions are designed to
reduce the risk of transmission of micro-
organisms from both recognized and
unrecognized sources of infection in the
hospital.
Requires:
Blood
Body fluids –secrétions & Excretions with the
exception of sweat
Non intact skin, Mucus membrane
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Personal protective Equipment
Gloves
Mask & Face shield
Gown
Goggles
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ACTIVE SURVEILLANCE
Active surveillance shall be done at least for high risk areas.
High risk areas under various setting include:
• Intensive care units (Neonatal ICU, Pediatric ICU, ICUs –
Cardio- Thoracic Vascular Surgery, Respiratory infections
(H1N1) units).
• Operation Theatres
• Dialysis Unit
• Burns Unit
• Transfusion services unit
• Food handlers
• Drinking water
• Central Sterile Services Department
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Recommendations to Prevent
Catheter-associated UTI-
• Personnel
• Hand hygiene
• Catheter Insertion
• Catheter Use
Closed Sterile Drainage
Irrigation not recommended
Urinary Flow – undisturbed
Specimen Collection
Meatal Care
Catheter Change Interval
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SURGICAL SITE INFECTIONS (SSI)
Surgical site infection prevention- Preparation of the
patient: Chlorehexidine pre bath
When to use
Before and after each patient contact
Before wearing sterile gloves for procedures (central
line, urinary catheter, peripheral line)
After removing gloves
After contact with inanimate objects in vicinity of patient
When moving from contaminated site to cleaned site
Hand hygiene- Surgical wash
When
Prior to any surgical procedure
How
Remove all rings, watches, bracelets
OR
Soap and water as for routine hand wash
Black waste
INFECTIOUS WASTE
MRSA screening
Indications
Interhospital transfer
Admission with outside central venous access
Admission with outside Foley’s catheter
Antibiotic exposure in past 6 months
Immunosuppressed patients
Previous hospitalization or surgery in past 12 months
Sisters to send nasal, axillary swabs for such patients
Place such patients under contact isolation till reports
received
HBV Vaccination in HCW
1 ml IM deltoid (never gluteal)
Ideal schedule 0,1,6 months
No need to restart if delay in doses
Test recipients for anti HbS levels after
completing series
If levels more than 10 mIU/ ml
(responders) then protected for life
Non responders (10%) repeat vaccination
series- 50% respond, rest permanently
susceptible
Varicella vaccination of HCW
Varicella is a highly transmissible
Varicella in HCW –loss of working days,
risk to patients/themselves
If no history of varicella – test for IgG
(may have had subclinical infection)
If negative then give 2 doses of varicella
vaccine 4 weeks apart (except pregnancy)
Prevention of occupational exposure
Environmental
cleaning
Prevention
Antimicrobial of specific
Stewardship HAI’s
www.cdc.com
www.who.com
THANK YOU