1 / 9

Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

Infection Prevention & Control (IPC). Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health. Infection Prevention & Control. Hand hygiene is the single most important action that decreases the spread of infection Hand hygiene is done with: - Alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR)

Mia_John
Télécharger la présentation

Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Infection Prevention & Control (IPC) Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

  2. Infection Prevention & Control • Hand hygiene is the single most important action that decreases the spread of infection • Hand hygiene is done with: • - Alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR) • - Regular liquid soap, water and disposable hand towels Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

  3. Hand hygiene • Alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR) • Approved AHS product • Use sufficient ABHR to rub all surfaces of hands (2-3 pumps) including between fingers and the base of the thumbs for a minimum of 15 seconds • Regular liquid soap, water and disposable hand towels • Wet hands, apply soap, rub all surfaces for minimum 15 seconds • Rinse with clear, running water • Recommended if hands are visibly soiled • Apply AHS approved hand creams to maintain skin integrity • Glove use is not a substitute for hand hygiene Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

  4. Four Moments of Hand Hygiene • Before each client contact or contact with their environment • Before clean/aseptic procedures (such as immunization) • After blood and body fluid exposure risk (such as after immunization) • After contact with the client or their environment AHS Hand Hygiene Policy and Procedure https://extranet.ahsnet.ca/teams/policydocuments/1/clp-hand-hygiene-ps-02-policy.pdf https://extranet.ahsnet.ca/teams/policydocuments/1/clp-hand-hygiene-ps-02-01-procedure.pdf Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

  5. Hand hygiene at large immunization sites • Examples only, not limited to these occasions: • Start and end of shift • Before and after contact with the client • Before handling immunization supplies (entering vaccine bags), including the set up of immunizing stations • After vaccine administered and before handling other equipment, such as papers and pens Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

  6. IPC for vaccine administration • Clean and disinfect clinic table/ work surface with appropriate low-level disinfectant (e.g., accelerated hydrogen peroxide, quaternary ammonium compounds) • - This is a two step procedure - clean first, and then disinfect • - Always start the disinfection stage with a clean cloth • Cover table/work station with a large clean drape • Use a small drape in front of immunizing staff as a clean work area • - avoid placing papers/pens, computers on this area • Place appropriate puncture resistant biohazard container for use at point of contact to dispose of sharps immediately after use Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

  7. Preparing for immunization in large public clinic sites • Maintain small drape as the clean surface for the immunization station (needles, syringes, swabs, etc) • When documenting ensure the clean surface is not contaminated by either paperwork or computer. • When station not in use: • - Drape with a clean drape (e.g., coffee times, meal times) • Drapes used to cover the immunization stations can be reused for the day • - Ensure they are folded so the inside portion maintains a clean field Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

  8. Preparing for immunization at large public clinic sites • During the clinic: • Immunization station and tables are cleaned and disinfected at the start of the clinic and at the end of the clinic, not at the beginning and end of staff shifts • Cleaning and disinfection of the station during the shift needs to be done only if the area becomes dirty/contaminated/wet • At that time, the area would be cleaned, disinfected and set up • At the end of the day, for sites that are only there for the day: • Clean and disinfect station per IPC Guidelines but not set up for the next day •  For sites where the campaign is ongoing & stations used next day: • Area cleaned, disinfected & set up with fresh supplies and draped in preparation for the next day. Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

  9. Cleaning of blood and body fluids • Appropriate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) must be worn • Gloves must be worn and if there is the possibility of splashing, further PPE (gown, mask and eye protection) may be required • Clean area by blotting blood/body fluids with disposable towels, discarding in a regular plastic-lined waste container • In addition, for non porous surfaces, clean area with soap & water once clean-up is completed, tie garbage bag and place in regular garbage • After initial cleaning, disinfect with a fresh solution of bleach (1 part bleach:9 parts water) or use a low level disinfectant • Thoroughly clean equipment (e.g. mop &handle, pail) before re-use • Wash hands with soap and running water Communicable Disease Control – Population, Public and Indigenous Health

More Related