Infection Control Flashcards

1
Q

what is the path of infection

A

causative agent-> source -> portal of exit -> mode of transmission -> portal of entry -> susceptible host

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2
Q

what are examples of portal of entry

A

mucous membranes, percutaneous injury, broken skin

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3
Q

what is the order of transmission efficacy

A
  1. direct innoculation
  2. broken skin
  3. mucosa - blood
  4. mucosa- blood/saliva
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4
Q

what are the bloodborn diseases of concern

A

hep B, hep C and HIV

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5
Q

what are transmission based precautions

A

for patients known to harbor airborne transmission disease or for aerosol generating procedures (now)

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6
Q

what immunizations do we need

A
Hep B
tdap
measles mumps rubella
varicella
polio
influenza (anually)
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7
Q

what are low moderate, high and very high risk activities

A

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

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8
Q

what are the steps before entering a room and after completion of care

A

before entering:

  1. hand hygiene
  2. clean gown
  3. mask
  4. eye protection
  5. hand hygiene
  6. clean gloves
  7. enter room

after care :

  1. remove gloves
  2. remove gown
  3. exit room
  4. hand hygiene
  5. remove eye protection
  6. remove mask
  7. hand hygiene
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9
Q

when can you not wear gloves

A

not while handling anything other than patient care or outside cubicle

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10
Q

what is the survivability of HIV

A

hours

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11
Q

what is the survivabbility of rhinovirus

A

14 hours

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12
Q

what is the survivability of staph

A

5 days

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13
Q

what is the survivability of hepatitis B

A

7 days

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14
Q

what is the survivability of hepatitis C

A

6 weeks

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15
Q

what is the survivability of tb

A

6-8 months

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16
Q

what are high, intermediate and low level chemical disinfectants

A

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

17
Q

what are the steps of disinfection

A
  • clean to remove visible and non visible debris
  • disinfect to remove microbial contamination (must remain wet for 3 minutes)
  • wipe, throw wipe!!!
18
Q

what do you do if you were exposed to potential infection

A
  • 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
19
Q

what are droplets? what are droplet nuclei

A

droplets: greater than 5 micrometers

droplet nuclei: particles from suspended droplets- less than 5 micrometers (airborne)

20
Q

what are obligate , preferential and opportunistic transmision types

A

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)

21
Q

what do you do for airborne or patient with covid; how many air exchanges per hour for new or old construction

A

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