Hoeltke Chapter2 Revised
Hoeltke Chapter2 Revised
Hoeltke Chapter2 Revised
Chapter 2
Objectives
• Nosocomial infection
• Community-acquired infection
Nosocomial Infection
• Healthcare-associated
• Hospital-acquired
• Develops 48 hours after admission or within
30 days after discharge from a hospital or
health care facility
Community-Acquired
Infection
• Infection picked up prior to admission
– Infection occurs before 48 hours after
admission
Types of Infection
• Local
– Infection restricted to one area of body
• Systemic
– Infection that affects entire body
• Autogenous
– Infection from patient’s own flora
Infection Control
• Communicable
disease
– Capable of
spreading from
person to person
Means of Transmission of Infection
• Contact
– Direct and indirect
• Droplet
• Vehicle
• Airborne
• Vector-borne
Standard Precautions
• Wash hands
• Wear gloves
• Wear protective covering
• Wear a mask and eye protection when
appropriate
• Use designated sharps containers
Tactics to Reduce Risk of Exposure
to Blood-borne Pathogens
•Engineering controls
•Work practices
•Housekeeping
•Hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccination
•Private rooms
•Personal protective equipment
Engineering Controls
• Handwashing
• Proper disposal of sharps
• Avoiding eating, drinking, smoking, handling
contact lenses, or applying cosmetics or lip
balm in work areas
• Storing food and drink separate from
infectious materials
Housekeeping
• Clean up spills
• Decontaminate soiled areas immediately with a
disinfectant such as 10 percent bleach made up
fresh daily
• Avoid picking up broken glass with hands
Hepatitis B Vaccination
• Must be available free of charge to phlebotomist
• Effective for more than 15 years in protecting the
phlebotomist from contracting the disease or
becoming a carrier
• Does not protect the phlebotomist from all types of
hepatitis, only hepatitis B
Private Rooms
• Masks
• Goggles
• Face shields
• Gowns
• Gloves
Evolution of Isolation Techniques
• First technique:
– Category-specific isolation
– Based on seven isolation categories
• Changed to disease-specific isolation
– Blood and body fluid precaution added
• Evolved into transmission-based isolation
Category-Specific Isolation
• Strict
• Contact
• Respiratory
• Tuberculosis
• Drainage/Secretion
• Enteric
• Protective or Reverse
Disease-Specific Isolation
• Strict
• Contact
• Respiratory
• Tuberculosis
• Enteric
• Drainage
• Blood and body fluid
Transmission-Based Precautions
• Fire extinguishers
– Class A
– Class B
– Class C
– Class D
– ABC type
Fire Safety
• Must be by:
– Incineration
– Chemical treatment
– Autoclave
Prevention of Needlestick
Injuries
• Eliminate use of needles when safe and
effective alternatives are available.
• Implement the use of devices with safety
features and evaluate their use.
Prevention of Needlestick
Injuries (cont.)
• Identify hazards and injury trends.
• Set priorities and strategies for prevention.
• Ensure health care workers are properly
trained in safe use and disposal of needles
and sharps.
Response to Accidental
• Biohazard Exposure
Wash exposed area with soap and water
• Report incident to supervisor immediately
• Exposed associate must be tested for HIV and
HBV if consent is given
• Source individual’s blood is tested for HIV and
HBV if consent is given
Response to Accidental
Biohazard Exposure
• If source patient refuses testing, is HIV or HBV
positive, or is in a high-risk category, associate
may elect to receive prophylactic treatment