Infection Control
Infection Control
I. INTRODUCTION
There are important concepts regarding infection prevention and control
measures that have been clarified over the past decade. In the health care
setting infection can easily spread from person to person.
A client may be infected while receiving care.
A health worker may be infected while carrying out their duties.
People who work or interact with clients in a health care setting may be
infected.
This transmission of infection is called cross infection.
It is essential to understand the way infection is controlled in any health care
setting including hospitals, residential aged care, community services, dental
practices, mortuaries or alternative health care services.
II. DEFINITION
INFECTION:
An invasion and multiplication of micro organisms in body tissues, as in an
infectious disease. The infectious process is similar to a circular chain with
each link representing one of the factors involved in the process.
The mere presence of micro organisms without reaction is not evidence of
infection.
-MedicineNet.com
Clients in all health care settings are at risk for acquiring infections because of
lower resistance to infectious micro organisms, increased exposure to numbers
and types of disease causing micro organisms and invasive procedures. In
acute ambulatory are facilities, clients can be exposed to pathogens. Some of
which may be resistant to most antibiotics. By practicing infection prevention
and control techniques, the nurse can avoid spreading micro organisms to
clients. Client teaching should include information concerning infections,
mode of transmission and methods of prevention.
-Potter Perry
INFECTION CONTROL:
Infection control is the discipline concerned with preventing nosocomial or
healthcare-associated infection, a practical (rather than academic) subdiscipline of epidemiology. It is an essential, though often under-recognized
and under-supported, part of the infrastructure of health care. Infection control
and hospital epidemiology are akin to public health practice, practiced within
the confines of a particular health-care delivery system rather than directed at
society as a whole.
-www.enotes.com
III. PURPOSE
The purpose of infection control is to reduce the occurrence of infectious
diseases. These diseases are usually caused by bacteria or viruses and can be
spread by human to human contact, animal to human contact, human contact
with an infected surface, airborne transmission through tiny droplets of
infectious agents suspended in the air, and, finally, by such common vehicles
as food or water. Diseases that are spread from animals to humans are known
as zoonoses; animals that carry disease agents from one host to another are
known as vectors.
IV. TRANSMISSION
Micro organisms are transmitted in health care settings by several routes, and
the same micro organism may be transmitted by more than one route. There
are five main routes of transmission: contact, droplet, airborne, common
vehicle, and vector borne.
a) Contact transmission, the most important and frequent mode of
transmission of health care associated infections (HAI), is divided into direct
and indirect contact transmission. Direct contact transmission involves a direct
body surface-to-body surface contact and physical transfer of micro organisms
between an infected or colonized person, such as occurs when a health care
provider turns a client, gives a client a bath, or performs other client care
activities that require direct personal contact.
i) Standard precautions
Standard precautions include the following five procedures:
Hand washing,
Use of personal protective equipment,
Correct handling and disposal of waste,
Appropriate cleaning of client care equipment, and
Hygienic environmental control.
Standard precautions apply whenever you may come in contact with
the following four bodily substances
Blood (including dried blood),
All body substances, secretions and excretions (excluding
sweat), regardless of whether or not they contain visible blood,
a) Hand washing
Hand washing is the single most effective way to reduce the number of microorganisms on the surface of the skin. It should always be performed:
Hand washing should be carried out before and after glove use as gloves may
have pinholes or other defects.
Type of protective
equipment
1. Sterile gloves
3. General-purpose
utility gloves
Type of use
Correct usage
b) Respiratory Protection
Masks are worn to protect you from the environment in which you are
working, and infection from clients. They are also worn to protect the client
from you if you are infectious. The correct mask must be worn depending on
the situation at hand.
Type of
protective
equipment
1. Paper Mask
2. Surgical mask
3. Specialised
particulate
respiratory filter
mask
4. Respiration
mask
Type of use
Correct usage
Has an inbuilt
filtration system.
Cover the nose and
mouth. Secured
correctly behind
the ears by straps.
c) Foot Protection
Appropriate footwear should be worn at all times for your own safety and to
prevent the spread of infection.
Type of protective
equipment
1. Shoe covers
Type of use
Correct usage
2. Enclosed,
Wear at all times to reduce
waterproof footwear contact with blood, bodily
with non-slip soles
secretions, excretions,
disinfectants, chemicals.
3. Protective
footwear
Upper section of
footwear should cover all
of the upper foot and be
made of waterproof
material. Soles should be
made of a substance that
reduces the chance of
slipping. Shoes should be
flat, with a heel of not
more than 2.5 cm.
d) Body Protection
Gowns and clothes such as overalls will reduce the possibility of contact with
hazardous or contaminated substances. They also protect from contact with
micro organisms.
Type of protective
equipment
1. Fabric or paper
gown
2. Plastic Apron
3. Overalls
Type of use
Correct usage
Change if overalls
become contaminated.
Wear when there is a risk of
Wash after use.
splashing from corrosive
Disposable overalls
materials.
should be correctly
discarded after use.
e) Eye Protection
Eyewear provides the worker or client with protection from splashes. Splashes
may be from bodily fluids, chemicals spray or splash, dust or particles.
Type of protective
equipment
1. Safety spectacles
2. Goggles
Type of use
Correct usage
f) Head Protection
Protection of the head is important in many areas. It is also important as a
means of preventing contamination.
Type of protective
equipment
Type of use
Correct usage
1. Hairnet/Cover
2. Hard Hat
Should be correct
type of hat for
different work areas
g) Ear Protection
Ear protection is necessary when there is a risk of auditory damage.
Type of protective
equipment
1. Ear Plugs
2. Ear Muffs
Type of use
Correct usage
h) Sharps Management
Sharps are any item that has the possibility to puncture or penetrate. They
include:
Needles, scissors, scalpels, razors, or anything that could constitute a danger of
penetration such as a sharp piece of metal, broken glass or a sharp piece of
plastic. Contaminated sharps have a high risk of transmitting blood-borne
diseases.
Methods to reduce the incidence of needle stick injuries and contamination
include:
Safe work practices and on going training,
The development and use of retractable needles and syringes and needlefree IV delivery systems,
X. WASTE MANAGEMENT
Waste management practices must meet national and local requirements; the
following principles are recommended as a general guide.
come into contact with biomedical waste, even if you are not sure your body
actually touched the biomedical waste.
Keep all sores and cuts covered.
Immediately replace wet bandages with clean, dry bandages.
Wear disposable latex gloves when handling biomedical waste.
Discard the gloves immediately after use.
Wear an apron or another type of cover to protect your clothes from
contact with the waste. If your clothes become soiled, put on fresh
clothes, and take a shower, if possible.
Launder or throw away clothes soiled with biomedical waste.
Promptly clean and disinfect soiled, hard-surfaced floors by using a
germicidal or bleach solution and mopping up with paper towels.
Clean soiled carpets. First blot up as much of the spill as possible
with paper towels and put the soiled paper towels in a plastic lined,
leak-proof container. Then try one of the following:
Steam cleans the carpet with an extraction method.
Scrub the carpet with germicidal rug shampoo and a brush. Soak the
brush used for scrubbing in a disinfectant solution and rinse the
brush. Let the carpet dry, and then vacuum it.
Never handle syringes, needles, or lancets with your hands. Use a
towel, shovel, and/or broom and a dustpan to pick up these sharp
objects. Dispose of them in a plastic soda pop bottle with a cap. Tape
down the bottle cap. Then throw the bottle in the trash.
XIII. JOURNALS
XV. SUMMERY
This updated guideline responds to changes in healthcare delivery and
addresses new concerns about transmission of infectious agents to patients and
healthcare workers in the health care setting and infection control. The primary
objective of the guideline is to improve the safety of the healthcare delivery
system by reducing the transmission.
The recommendations on standard principles provide guidance on infection
control precautions that should be applied by all healthcare personnel to the
care of patients in community and primary care settings.
The recommendations are divided into four distinct interventions:
hand hygiene
the use of personal protective equipment
XVI. CONCLUSION
XVII. BIBILOGRAPHY
Seminar on
Infection Control
Submitted To:-
Submitted By:-
Mrs. Sharadha
Mrs. Udaya
M.Sc (N)
Sree.G
M.Sc., Nursing Ist Year