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Personal Protective Equipment Whats new and a handson review

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Title: Personal Protective Equipment Whats new and a handson review


1
Personal Protective Equipment Whats new and a
hands-on review
  • June 1, 2006
  • MCHC Bioagent Hands-On Train the Trainer Session
  • Stephanie R. Black, MD
  • Rush University Medical Center
  • Section of Infectious Diseases

2
Overview
  • Precautions
  • Opportunistic Airborne Infections
  • Aerosol Generating Procedures
  • Augmenting your IC program
  • Skills stations

3
(No Transcript)
4
Epidemic Risk Comparison
5
Modes of Transmission of Infectious Agents
  • Contact
  • Direct (body-to-body)
  • Indirect (e.g., fomites/environment, HCWs
    hands)
  • Large Droplet (gt5µm travel 3 feet)
  • Small Droplet (droplet nuclei 5µm airborne)
  • Endogenous (auto-inoculation device-related)
  • Common source
  • Vectorborne

6
Precautions are Based on Modes of Transmission
When possible cohort if not possible. Avoid
rooming with immunosuppressed or high risk
patients.
7
Standard
  • Gloves
  • contact blood or body fluids
  • mucous membranes
  • non-intact skin
  • Remove gloves after wearing
  • Hand hygiene after glove removal

8
Contact
  • Gloves each time enter room
  • Remove gloves and disinfect after
  • Disinfect equipment (eg stethoscopes)
  • Gown if clothing may come in contact with patient
    or linen

9
Droplet
  • Surgical mask within 3 feet of patient
  • Hand hygiene after providing care
  • Disinfect equipment (eg stethoscope) after use
  • Patient wears surgical mask during transport
  • Children on droplet may not use common playrooms

10
Airborne
  • N-95 mask or PAPR in patient room
  • Hand hygiene after patient care
  • Negative air-flow room
  • Patient wears surgical mask during transport
  • Room vacant for 1 hour after patient discharge

11
Aerobiologic Pathway for the Transmission of
Communicable Respiratory Disease
Roy CJ et al, N Engl J Med 20043501710-2.
12
Airborne Opportunists
  • Influenza
  • SARS
  • Others???
  • Initiate infection by a small dose delivered to
    lung on a single airborne particle
  • Roy CJ et al, N Engl J Med 20043501710-2.,
    Booth et al. JID 20051911472-7

13
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14
Model of the Movement of the SARS Virus-Laden
Plume
Yu et al, N Engl J Med 20043501731-9.
15
(No Transcript)
16
Aerosol Generating Procedures
  • Endotrachial intubation
  • Aerosolized/nebulized medication
  • Diagnostic sputum induction
  • Bronchoscopy
  • Airway suctioning
  • Trach care
  • Chest physiotherapy
  • Nasopharyngeal aspirate
  • CPAP/BiPAP
  • High-frequency ocillatory ventilation
  • Postmortem excision of lung tissue

WHO Interim Infection Control Guideline for
Health Care Facilities, amended 2/9/06
17
Healthcare Worker Exposure Risk
Adapted from NEJM 2005 353 1374-85
18
Studies of Influenza Transmission
  • Mice Droplets droplet nuclei transmit
    influenza
  • Humans
  • Fomites/environment hands -- culture data
  • Transmission studies
  • Higher preexisting antibody titers require larger
    inocula for transmission of clinical illness
  • Shedding correlates with severity of illness and
    fever
  • Small droplet aerosols require lower inoculum
    (e.g., 10-100 lt nasal instillation)

19
Experiments of Nature
  • Review of 12 acute-care nosocomial outbreaks
    (Lancet Infectious Diseases 2002 2145-55)
  • 1957 flu pandemic (J Clin Invest 1959
    38199-212)
  • Homer, Alaska Airplane outbreak (Am J Epidemiol
    1979 1101-6)

20
Epidemiology of 12 Nosocomial Acute-Care
Influenza Outbreaks
  • Strains A (11 mostly H3N2), B (2)
  • Years 1960s (1), 1970s (4), 1980s (2), 1990s
    (3), 2000s (2)
  • Outbreak durations 2-69 (median 7) days
  • Attack rates Patients 3-50 (affected wards)
  • 0.7-20
    (hospital-wide)
  • HCWs 11-59 (flu caregivers)
  • Patient mortality rates 0 (5) 10-67 (7)
  • Control measures Vaccination, heightened
    diagnostics surveillance, isolation hygiene,
    antiviral drugs

Salgado CD, et al. Lancet Infect Dis 2002
2145-55.
21
Blumenfeld HL, et al. J Clin Invest 1959
38199-212.
22
Blumenfeld HL, et al. J Clin Invest 1959
38199-212.
23
Moser MR, et al. Am J Epidemiol 1979 1101-6.
24
Moser MR, et al. Am J Epidemiol 1979 1101-6.
25
Factors Shown to be Important in the Transmission
of Common Respiratory Agents
Musher DM, N Engl J Med 2003 3481256-65.
26
Influenza Transmission and Precautions Bottom
Line
  • Airborne transmission probably occurs --
    opportunistic
  • Relative importance of small vs. large droplets
    and contact transmission in modern healthcare
    facilities is not known -- older literature vs.
    current experience/anecdotes and seasonal vs.
    pandemic flu
  • Airborne isolation rooms (negative pressure) or
    other single rooms or cohorting prudent but may
    not be feasible during large outbreaks
  • Implications for national recommendations
    droplet precautions and cohort ILI pts for
    seasonal flu more stringent (N-95) for pandemic
    flu ?

Borrowed from Weinstein who adapted from Bridges
et al, CID, 2003371094-1101
27
Hand Hygiene-soap and water
  • Indications
  • Visibly dirty/contaminated/blood/body fluids
  • Before eating
  • After restroom
  • Caring for patients with C. difficile
  • Methods
  • Wet hands
  • Apply product
  • Rub hands together for 15 seconds
  • Use towel to dry and turn off sink
  • Avoid hot water due to increased risk of
    dermatitis

Institute for Healthcare Improvement,
www.IHI.org, www.who.int/patientsafety/events/05/H
H en.pdf
28
Hand Hygiene-Alcohol-based Hand Gel
  • Indications
  • patient contact
  • Donning sterile gloves to place TLC
  • Inserting indwelling urinary catheter, PIV,
    invasive device
  • Contact with skin, body fluids, wounds, mucous
    membranes
  • Move from contaminated body site to clean body
    site
  • Contact with inanimate objects in immediate pt
    vicinity
  • After removing gloves
  • Method
  • Apply product to palm of one hand
  • Rub hands together covering all surfaces of hands
    and fingers until dry

Institute for Healthcare Improvement,
www.IHI.org, www.who.int/patientsafety/events/05/H
H en.pdf
29
Risk Factors for Poor Adherence
  • Physician
  • Nursing Assistant
  • Male sex
  • Working in ICU
  • Working during the week (vs. weekend)
  • Automated sink
  • Activities w/ high risk cross-transmission
  • No. of opportunities for hand hygiene per hour of
    patient care

30
Self-reported reasons for poor adherence with
hand-hygiene
  • Irritation/dryness from agents
  • Location/no. of sinks
  • Lack of soap and paper towels
  • Too busy
  • Understaffing/overcrowding
  • Patient needs take priority
  • Interferes with HCW relationship w/ pt
  • Low risk acquiring infection from pt
  • Gloves obviate need for hand hygiene
  • No role model
  • Forgetting
  • Skepticism/disagreement

Pittet D. ICHE 200021381-6, MMWR 2002 51/RR-16
31
Putting it on
  • Gown
  • Mask/Respirator
  • Secure ties
  • Fit flexible band at nose bridge
  • Fit snug to face and below chin
  • Fit check respirator
  • Goggles or Face Shield
  • Gloves
  • Extend to cover wrist of isolation gown

32
Taking it off-gloves first!!
  • Remove PPE at doorway/anteroom
  • Remove respirator
  • after leaving pt room
  • closing door

33
Taking it off-gloves first !!
  • Gloves
  • Outside of gloves contaminated
  • Goggles or faceshield
  • Handle by headband or earpieces
  • Gown
  • pull away touching inside only
  • Mask or Respirator
  • Grasp by ties or headbands to remove
  • Hand Hygiene

34
PAPR
  • Aerosol generating procedures
  • DO NOT USE
  • fire
  • low oxygen
  • chemical emergency
  • sx of intolerance
  • Equipment inspection and set up
  • Conducting air-flow checks
  • Donning PAPR unit

35
PAPR
  • Check face seal
  • Sign/symptoms of malfunction
  • Where/when to remove unit
  • Remove unit
  • Cleaning and storage of unit
  • Connecting to battery chargers

36
Augmenting Your IC Program
  • Precaution Badges
  • Personal protection stations
  • Respiratory Etiquette in clinics, ED triage
  • PPE surge capacity
  • Administration buy-in

37
Infection Control Card
38
Infection Control Card
39
PPE Surge Capacity
  • Review list of current supplies to determines
    needs
  • Review expired items and reorder
  • Flashlights should be onsite
  • Labeling of boxed items in warehouse
  • Environmental, Pharmacy, Pediatrics, Respiratory,
    ED, Infection Control, Food Service input
  • Keep master list of supplies at command center

40
the secret in the care of the patient is in
caring for patient
  • -Francis Peabody, MD 1927

Lancet Infectious Diseases 20022145-55
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