Infection Control Flashcards
what is the path of infection
causative agent-> source -> portal of exit -> mode of transmission -> portal of entry -> susceptible host
what are examples of portal of entry
mucous membranes, percutaneous injury, broken skin
what is the order of transmission efficacy
- direct innoculation
- broken skin
- mucosa - blood
- mucosa- blood/saliva
what are the bloodborn diseases of concern
hep B, hep C and HIV
what are transmission based precautions
for patients known to harbor airborne transmission disease or for aerosol generating procedures (now)
what immunizations do we need
Hep B tdap measles mumps rubella varicella polio influenza (anually)
what are low moderate, high and very high risk activities
low: administrative
moderate: urgent or emergency care
high: aerosol generating procedures on a well patient or anything on a covid patient
very high: aerosol on covid patient
what are the steps before entering a room and after completion of care
before entering:
- hand hygiene
- clean gown
- mask
- eye protection
- hand hygiene
- clean gloves
- enter room
after care :
- remove gloves
- remove gown
- exit room
- hand hygiene
- remove eye protection
- remove mask
- hand hygiene
when can you not wear gloves
not while handling anything other than patient care or outside cubicle
what is the survivability of HIV
hours
what is the survivabbility of rhinovirus
14 hours
what is the survivability of staph
5 days
what is the survivability of hepatitis B
7 days
what is the survivability of hepatitis C
6 weeks
what is the survivability of tb
6-8 months
what are high, intermediate and low level chemical disinfectants
high : gluteraldehyde, hydrogen peroxide
intermediate: tubrculocidal, hospital disinfectant (iodophor, phenol, chlorine, sodium bromide) effective against SARS cov2 myobacterium tuberculosis
low level: hospital not tuberculocidal- quaternary ammonium
what are the steps of disinfection
- clean to remove visible and non visible debris
- disinfect to remove microbial contamination (must remain wet for 3 minutes)
- wipe, throw wipe!!!
what do you do if you were exposed to potential infection
- discontinue use of instrument involved
- cleanse area
- report to GPL
- complete exposure form
- request source patient testing
- referral to medical provider for follow up and counseling
what are droplets? what are droplet nuclei
droplets: greater than 5 micrometers
droplet nuclei: particles from suspended droplets- less than 5 micrometers (airborne)
what are obligate , preferential and opportunistic transmision types
obligate: disease following transmission of agent ONLY through inhalation of aerosols (tb)
preferential: disease follows transmission through multiple routes, predominantly aerosols (measles and varicella)
opportunistic: disease follos other transmission routes but under special circumstances may be transmitted through aerosols (smallpox, sars, influenza, norovirus)
what do you do for airborne or patient with covid; how many air exchanges per hour for new or old construction
12 for new, 6 for old air exchanges!!
-airborn isolation roomm, negative pressure, air exchanges , air exhausted to outside or hepa filter
–BUT JUST POSPONE because you cant really follow it
no aairs, patient cant wear a mask, training? defer care