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Infection Control C' Diff, MRSA, VRE

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Title: Infection Control C' Diff, MRSA, VRE


1
Infection ControlC. Diff, MRSA, VRE
  • Karyn Leible, RN, MD
  • Chief clinical Officer Pinon Management
  • Medical Director
  • Colorado State Veterans Home, Fitzsimons

2
483.65 Infection ControlF Tag 441
  • F-Tag 441 (R) - Facility must
  • establish and maintain an Infection Control
    Program
  • provide a safe, sanitary, comfortable environment
  • Help prevent development and transmission of
    disease and infection

3
Diarrhea Outbreak
  • Your facility has a significant diarrhea
    outbreak
  • Your Inf Cntrl program is working (the medical
    director is supposed to be notified of possible
    outbreaks). The ICP calls to inform you that the
    facility has had 16 cases of diarrhea in the last
    two days. (No surprise, staff absenteeism is up
    too).
  • Are there any recommendations to prevent spread
    you would like to make?

4
Diarrhea outbreak
  • The ICP reminds you that the facility was cited
    at the last survey for non-compliance with F-Tag
    444 - Handwashing F-Tag 444 is also under 483.65
    Infection Control
  • You remember giving an inservice on handwashing
    as part of the Plan of Correction (POC)

5
F-Tag 444 Hand washing
  • ( R) The facility must require staff to wash
    their hands after each direct resident contact
    for which handwashing is indicated by accepted
    professional practice.
  • (IG) Procedures must be followed to prevent cross
    contamination, including handwashing or changing
    gloves after providing personal care, or.
  • IG) Facilities for hand washing must be available

6
Case 2 Diarrhea outbreak
  • You recommend isolation (remain in room, meals in
    room) for residents with diarrhea
  • This is of course in addition to your ongoing
    universal precautions policy
  • standard precautions
  • Your social worker says you cant do that, it
    violates residents rights

7
F-Tag 442 Preventing the spread of infection
  • ( R ) When the infection control program
    determines that a resident needs isolation to
    prevent the spread of infection, the facility
    must isolate the resident
  • ( IG ) Isolate appropriately to reduce the risk
    of transmission

8
F-Tag 442 Preventing the spread of infection
  • (IG) Isolate residents only to the degree needed
    to isolate the infecting organism
  • (IG) Method should be the least restrictive
    possible while maintaining the integrity of the
    process

9
Diarrhea outbreak
  • This example is real
  • In South Dakota between October 2, 2002 and
    January 8, 2003, 14 of 6093 residents became ill
    with acute gastrointestinal symptoms
  • In the facility, 56 of residents had
    gastrointestinal symptoms within a 9 day period
    at the end of December 2002

10
Diarrhea outbreak
  • Investigation by the state health department
    strongly suggested that the majority of these
    cases were related to Norovirus infection
  • This is the same virus implicated in diarrheal
    outbreaks on cruise ships

11
Norovirus
  • High attack rates (68 in one study)
  • Can shed up to two weeks after sxs resolve
  • Low infectious dose (lt 100 virons)
  • High persistence of agent in the environment
  • Potential for multiple modes of transmission
  • Percentage cases with vomiting gt 50
  • Absence of long-lasting immunity
  • Outbreaks can involve multiple strains

www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/revb/gastro/norovirus-fact
sheet-htm
12
Surveillance
13
Infection ControlSurveillance Program
  • Infections present on the residents admission or
    readmission, or that develop within 48 hours
    after admission, are NOT considered nosocomial
  • 48 hours may not be long enough in the case of
    C. difficile, but regs and their necessarily
    arbitrary definitions cannot account for this
    outlier

14
Infection ControlSurveillance Program
  • It is important and useful to have precise
    definitions
  • Be sure you know what definitions the ICP is
    utilizing
  • Be sure the ICP is compulsive in adhering to
    definitions

15
Infection ControlEpidemiological Definitions
  • General rules
  • A. Only NEW symptoms or acute changes in chronic
    symptoms should be considered
  • B. Potential noninfectious causes of the
    symptoms and signs should always be considered
    before diagnosing infection
  • C. Infection should be diagnosed based on
    several supporting data and not on a single
    finding. Microbiological and radiological
    findings should be used only to confirm clinical
    evidence of infection

16
MDS Section I-2 asks about infections
17
Infection Control
  • Rates of infection
  • Calculation of rates
  • Review and trend monthly
  • Watch for patterns, outbreaks
  • Add your clinical knowledge to apparent
    statistical truth
  • Review of antibiotic usage is often an easily
    obtained and useful adjunct to ICP generated
    statistical data

18
Clostridium difficile
  • Diagnostic Criteria
  • Diarrhea
  • Evidence of CDAD (c. diff associated diarrhea) by
    any of the following
  • Positive assay
  • Pseudomembranous colitis
  • Positive stool culture

19
Clostridium difficile
  • Diagnostic Tests
  • Cell Culture Cytotoxin Assay
  • Stool Culture
  • EIA

20
Clostridium difficile
  • Facts
  • Leading cause of nosocomial enteric infection.
  • 3 million new cases/year in U.S.
  • 20 thousand new cases/year in U.S. outside
    hospital setting.

21
C. DIFF.
C. DIFF.
C. DIFF.
22
Clostridium difficile
  • HEALTH CARE WORKER
  • Rarely have fecal carriage.
  • Carriage on stethoscopes, clothing and hands well
    documented.
  • Hand washing/gloves proven to decrease rates of
    infection.
  • One study, HCW hand culture rate was 59.

23
Clostridium difficile
  • PRIMARY PREVENTION
  • Antibiotic Control
  • Avoid antibiotic use.
  • Limit duration.
  • Antibiotics with and association
  • Cephalosporins (keflex, rocephin)
  • Clindamycin
  • Floroquinalones (Cipro, Levoquin)

24
Clostridium difficile
  • PRIMARY PREVENTION
  • Hand washing and gloves.
  • Both proven to lower Clostridium difficile rates.
  • Simple tasks but compliance low.
  • Responsibility
  • As your mother said WASH YOUR HANDS
  • And use soap!

25
Clostridium difficile
  • PRIMARY PREVENTION
  • What to wash with?
  • Study liquid soap vs 4 chlorhexidine
  • Without gloves no difference.
  • With gloves liquid soap
  • out-performed 4 chlorhexidine.
  • Wash with soap
  • Remember Mom says use soap!

26
Clostridium difficile
  • PRIMARY PREVENTION
  • Cleaning the Long Term Care Facility
  • Eliminate or reduce spores.
  • Spores are widespread and can persist for
    weeks-months.
  • Spores are resistant to most commonly used
    disinfectants.
  • 110 bleach and water solution
  • Cleaning reduces spore numbers.

27
Clostridium difficile
  • PRIMARY PREVENTION
  • Cleaning the facility
  • As bed occupancy increases, time for cleaning
    decreases.
  • Frequent movement of patients from bed-to-bed.
  • Readmissions of asymptomatic carriers.

28
Clostridium difficile
  • SECONDARY PREVENTION
  • Hand washing/gloves.
  • Gowns.
  • Thorough cleaning of all contaminated and
    potentially contaminated surfaces.
  • Isolation/private rooms (the greater the
    diarrhea, the greater the need).

29
Clostridium difficile
  • SECONDARY PREVENTION
  • Room contamination rates (McFarland, 1989).
  • C. diff. (-) patient 8
  • C. diff. Asymptomatic carrier 29
  • CDAD patient 49

30
Clostridium difficile
  • An outbreak is likely to be caused by the
    transmission of organisms by staff and a
    breakdown in the use of standard precautions.
  • Therefore an intense education program for staff
    should ensue with rigorous supervision of
    handwashing and use of gloves and gowns.

31
Resistant Organisms
32
Resistant Organisms
  • The admissions coordinator wants to admit a
    patient whose labs indicate MRSA is growing in
    the sputum. The ICP calls to see if this is ok
    and to ask what precautions, if any, will be
    necessary.

33
Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
  • What we think we know about MRSA
  • STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS
  • 40 of healthy adults colonized with SA, half of
    those with nasal colonization carry it on their
    hands
  • 10-44 of NF residents may be colonized
  • Half-life of colonization estimated to be 40
    months
  • Eradication of colonization rarely indicated
  • Re-colonization after treatment is stopped is
    common
  • Tend to select for resistant organisms

34
What we think we know about MRSA
  • Colonization rate increases with
  • Bedridden
  • Feeding tube, urinary catheter
  • Poor functional status
  • Hospitalization within 6 months
  • Fecal incontinence
  • Wounds
  • Dialysis

35
What we think we know about MRSA
  • Transmission
  • Contaminated environmental surfaces NOT felt to
    play a big role
  • Contact (person to person)
  • Role of airborne spread unclear
  • Medicated soaps or alcohol gels may remove SA
    from skin

36
MRSA in Wounds
  • Attempt to cohort with other MRSA residents
  • Avoid non-MRSA roommates who have unhealed
    wounds, indwelling catheters, or are
    immunosuppressed
  • If drainage can be contained in a dressing,
    resident may go out of room unless exhibiting
    behaviors likely to increase chance of
    transmission (e.g., picking at wound dressing,
    picking nose)

37
MRSA in Urine
  • MRSA in urine
  • Cohort with other MRSA patients
  • Avoid high risk roommates
  • If continent, may leave room
  • If incontinent, ICP and Medical Director should
    analyze whether isolation to room is necessary
    (usually not)

38
Respiratory MRSA
  • Active pneumonia or bronchitis
  • Private room
  • Standard surgical masks for all entering room
  • Respiratory tract colonization without signs of
    infection
  • Private room not necessary
  • Cohort
  • Avoid high risk roommates
  • At first sign of acute exacerbation, re-evaluate
    need for respiratory (droplet) isolation

39
MRSA
  • Housekeeping standard practices appropriate
  • Barriers
  • Gloves should be used, wash hands after removing
    gloves
  • Gown use if care activity likely to result in
    soiled clothing (i.e., gown not needed to take a
    temperature or give medication)
  • Masks needed only if aerosolization likely
  • Isolation carts likely to be helpful

40
MRSA in LTC
  • In LTC
  • Infection rates
  • (colonized 10/yr non colonized 2-4/yr)
  • Colonization not clearly related to MRSA-induced
    morbidity
  • Non-MRSA mortality in colonized residents is 2-3
    times higher than in non-colonized
  • probably reflecting functional status and
    underlying disease

41
MRSA Emerging issues
  • Vancomycin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
  • One case reported from Detroit in 2002
  • One case reported from Pennsylvania in 2003
  • One case reported from New York in 2004
  • (MMWR 4-23-2004)
  • Many more since

42
MRSA Guidelines
  • Changes
  • Hibliclens baths and mupirocin to nares no longer
    required during treatment of MRSA infection.
  • Surveillance cultures and/or decolonization
    therapy should not be required for admission to a
    LTCF.

43
MRSA Guidelines
  • Outbreak
  • Increase in number of MRSA cases or a cluster of
    new cases (facility dependent)
  • Increase of 25
  • 3 or more new healthcare associated cases
  • Decolonization of residents with MRSA
  • Only in consultation with medical director or
    infection control specialist.
  • Decolonization of healthcare workers
  • Only if linked to epidemic

44
MRSA Guidelines
  • Outbreak
  • Surveillance cultures
  • Skin breakdown, draining wounds, anterior nares
  • Other affected sites
  • Serial cultures weekly to document end of
    transmission
  • Focus on involved unit, indiv at high risk for
    MRSA, roommates
  • Remember only consider surveillance cultures in
    outbreak situations.

45
Resistant Organisms
  • What if the potential resident had a urine
    culture showing VRE? Would you approve
    admission?

46
What we think we know about VRE
  • ENTEROCOCCI, (E. faecalis E. faecium)
  • normal inhabitants of the bowel
  • often resistant to aminoglycosides
  • when high resistance occurs to gentamycin and
    streptomycin, there is usually no reliably
    bactericidal regimen

47
What we think we know about VRE
  • Multiple genetic mechanisms for vancomycin
    resistance
  • Vancomycin resistance has been demonstrated to
    transfer between VRE and Staph aureus, Listeria,
    and Strep pyogenes
  • Death rates from VRE bacteremia may exceed 30

48
What we think we know about VRE
  • RISK FACTORS FOR COLONIZATION
  • Recent treatment with oral or parenteral
    Vancomycin or cephalosporins
  • Recent treatment with anti-anaerobic drugs
    (metronidazole, clindamycin, imipenem)
  • Prolonged hospitalization
  • Proximity to patient colonized by VRE (not
    clearly demonstrated in LTC)

49
What we think we know about VRE
  • RISK FACTORS FOR COLONIZATION
  • Care by nurse who cares for another VRE patient
  • Longer ICU stay
  • Care in hospital with high VRE prevalence
  • Contamination from inanimate objects
  • Factors increasing environmental or skin
    contamination (e.g., diarrhea)

50
What we think we know about VRE
  • COLONIZATION
  • Fecal VRE an important source of infection as
    well as nosocomial spread
  • Skin colonization (even above the waist) is
    common
  • Duration of colonization variable (up to years)

51
Control Efforts for VRE
  • Limit use of vancomycin
  • Limit use of other antibiotics, especially
    cephalosporins
  • Vigorous environmental cleaning
  • Isolation
  • Rarely eliminate VRE entirely from institution

52
What we think we know about VRE
  • CONTROL EFFORTS
  • Consider medical director chart review of
    residents with orders for vancomycin, fosfomycin,
    quinupristin-dalfopristin and linezolid to ensure
    drug is truly indicated

53
Inappropriate uses of Vancomycin
  • Eradication of MRSA colonization
  • Primary treatment of C. difficile colitis
  • Prophylaxis for indwelling catheters
  • Topical use for irrigation
  • When cultures are negative for B-lactam resistant
    organisms
  • When only 1 of multiple blood cxs for
    coagulase negative staphylococci

54
Appropriate uses of Vancomycin
  • Treatment of serious infections caused by
    beta-lactam resistant gram positive organisms
  • Treatment of infections caused by gram positive
    organisms in patients with true beta-lactam
    allergy
  • C. difficile colitis which is both severe and
    unresponsive to metronidazole

55
VRE Control Efforts
  • All enterococcus isolates should be tested for
    sensitivity to vancomycin
  • Surveillance cultures for VRE are NOT indicated
    unless in epidemic situation, or high risk unit
    (vent unit, dialysis unit)
  • Do stool or rectal swab culture on roommates of
    newly diagnosed VRE residents

56
VRE Control Efforts
  • Notify ambulance staff and receiving
    hospitals/clinics when VRE resident is being
    transferred
  • Educate staff about VRE and facilitys VRE
    policies
  • Monitor rates of VRE infection and compliance
    with policies

57
VRE Control Efforts Isolation
  • Private room or cohort with another VRE patient
    (controversial in LTC)
  • Wear gloves when entering room of VRE resident
  • Wear gown if substantial contact with resident or
    environmental surfaces is anticipated, if
    resident is incontinent, or resident has ostomy,
    diarrhea, or wound drainage

58
VRE Control Efforts Isolation
  • Devoted equipment in room
  • Remove gloves immediately upon exiting room AND
    wash hands with soap and water
  • Ensure clothing and hands dont contact
    environmental surfaces after removal of gloves
    and gown and handwashing

59
VRE Control Efforts Isolation
  • STOPPING VRE ISOLATION
  • Primary site culture is negative x1 if site is
    normally sterile
  • Primary site culture is negative x2 (at least 72
    hours apart) if site not normally sterile (e.g.,
    skin, bowel, sputum)
  • Stool VRE cultures negative x3 (at least 72 hours
    apart)

60
VRE Control Efforts Isolation
  • SHEA ISOLATION RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Limit resident transport to situations required
    for medical care transport with precautions
  • Residents may travel out of room, assuming they
    are coherent (able to understand instructions
    about basic hygiene), continent of stool (or
    diapered to contain stool), and wearing clean
    clothing
  • Room restrictions probably appropriate for
    residents with wound drainage not contained by a
    dressing, or those incontinent or having diarrhea

61
Resistant Organisms in Non-Hospital Settings CDC
Guidance
  • Standard and Contact precautions and consider
  • Patient placement - Private room, if possible.
    (when not available, cohort). Another option is
    to place an infected patient with a patient who
    does not have risk factors for infection.
  • Group activities Maintaining socialization and
    access to rehab is important. Infected or
    colonized patients should be permitted to
    participate in group meals and activities if
    draining wounds are covered, bodily fluids are
    contained, and the patients observe good hygienic
    practices

62
Infection Control
  • Infection Control - Parting Thoughts
  • Get to know the facility ICP very well. Be sure
    this person is well-trained and trustworthy.
  • Policies may seem boring, but they can really
    help people keep their wits and do the correct
    thing in a time of urgency or crisis

63
Infection Control
  • Infection Control - Parting Thoughts
  • Guidelines may seem set in stone, but they change
    frequently. Develop a method to keep up with
    changes. Distinguish between proposed changes
    (which the administrator hears about and panics)
    and actual finalized changes (which, if enforced
    by regulation, must be accommodated)

64
Infection Control
  • Infection Control - Parting Thoughts
  • Recognize not all guidelines are written with the
    realities of LTC in mind
  • Sometimes the guidelines are enforced by
    regulation and you must make them work
  • Sometimes logical thinking is permissible and
    adaptation is appropriate and acceptable

65
QUESTIONS?
66
PINON HOSPITALITY SUITE 515 TO 645
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