Infection Prevention & Control
What is infection prevention and control?
 Infection prevention and control is:
 • a scientific approach with
 • practical solutions designed to prevent harm, caused by
   infections, to patients and health care workers
 • grounded in principles of infectious disease,
   epidemiology, social science and health system
   strengthening, and
 • rooted in patient safety and health service quality
 •   Source: WHO Infection Prevention and control web pages;; https://www.who.int/gpsc/ipc/en/
Who is at risk of infection?
                               Everyone
Benefits of IPC
                                                         Protecting yourself
                                                           Protecting your
                                                              patients
                                                           Protecting your
                                                         family, community &
                                                            environment
    •   WHO2015 Safe & Quality Health Services Package
IPC goals in outbreak preparedness
         1.   To reduce transmission of health care associated
              infections
         2.   To enhance the safety of staff, patients and visitors
         3.   To enhance the ability of the organization/health facility
              to respond to an outbreak 
         4.   To lower or reduce the risk of the hospital (health care
              facility) itself amplifying the outbreak
   Role of the IPC focal point, team or committee
• Knowledge: have an understanding of the IPC strategies
  needed for outbreaks/epidemics, etc
• Assessment, preparedness and readiness
• Policy and SOPs development
• Participate in response and recovery
• Participate in surveillance & monitoring
• Patient management
• Infrastructure for patient management
• Education
General advice for
COVID-19
• Avoid close contact with people
  suffering from acute respiratory
  infections
• Frequent hand hygiene, especially
  after direct contact with ill people or
  their environment
• People with symptoms of acute
  respiratory infection should practice
   • respiratory etiquette
   • wear a medical mask
   • seek medical care for advice
IPC strategies
IPC strategies for preventing/limiting
the spread of COVID-19
 • Applying standard precautions for all patients
 • Ensuring triage, early recognition, and source
   control
 • Implementing empiric additional precautions
   for suspected cases of COVID-19 infection
 • Implementing administrative controls
 • Using environmental and engineering controls.
Standard Precautions
Standard precautions
• The basic level of IPC precautions, to be used for ALL
  patients at ALL times regardless of suspected or
  confirmed status of the patient
• Risk assessment is critical for all activities, i.e. assess
  each health care activity and determine the personal
  protective equipment (PPE) that is needed for
  adequate protection
Elements of Standard Precautions
 1.   Hand hygiene
 2.   Respiratory hygiene (etiquette)
 3.   PPE according to the risk
 4.   Safe injection practices, sharps
      management and injury prevention
 5.   Safe handling, cleaning and disinfection of
      patient care equipment
 6.   Environmental cleaning
 7.   Safe handling and cleaning of soiled linen
 8.   Waste management
   Chain of Transmission
• For an infection to spread, all links must be connected
• Breaking any one link, will stop disease transmission!
Hand Hygiene
    • Best way to prevent the spread of germs in the health care
      setting and community
    • Our hands are our main tool for work as health care workers-
      and they are the key link in the chain of transmission
          Door handles                         Instruments
          Medication
          Cellphones                      Caregivers
Hand hygiene: WHO 5 moments
•   https://www.who.int/infection-prevention/tools/hand-hygiene/en/
 Hand hygiene: HOW
                                                                  • Use appropriate product and
                                                                    technique
                                                                  • An alcohol-based hand rub
                                                                    product is preferable, if
                                                                    hands are not visibly soiled
                                                                     • Rub hands for 20–30
                                                                       seconds!
                                                                  • Soap, running water and
                                                                    single use towel, when
                                                                    visibly dirty or contaminated
                                                                    with proteinaceous material
                                                                     • Wash hands for 40–60
https://www.who.int/infection-prevention/tools/hand-hygiene/en/        seconds!
https://www.who.int/infection-prevention/tools/hand-hygiene/en/
Respiratory hygiene/etiquette
  Reduces the spread of microorganisms (germs) that
  cause respiratory infections (colds, flu).
  • Turn head away from others when
    coughing/sneezing
  • Cover the nose and mouth with a tissue.
  • If tissues are used, discard immediately into the
    trash
  • Cough/sneeze into your sleeve if no tissue is
    available
  • Clean your hands with soap and water or alcohol
    based products
  Do not spit here and there
    Image source: https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus-2019/advice-for-public
Promoting respiratory hygiene
• Encourage handwashing for patients with
  respiratory symptoms
• Provide masks for patients with respiratory
  symptoms
• Patients with fever + cough or sneezing should be
  kept at least 1m away from other patients
• Post visual aids reminding patients and visitors
  with respiratory symptoms to cover their cough
PPE for use in health care for COVID-19
  Face Mask       N95 Mask        Face shield            Goggle
 Nose + mouth    Nose + mouth   Eyes + nose + mouth         Eyes
  Gown          Apron            Gloves           Head cover
                                                      Head + hair
                Body              Hands
  Body
Risk Assessment and Standard Precautions
    • Risk assessment: risk of exposure and extent of contact
      anticipated with blood, body fluids, respiratory droplets,
      and/or open skin
            • Select which PPE items to wear based on this
              assessment
            • Perform hand hygiene according to the WHO “5
              Moments”
            • Should be done for each patient, each time
                            Make this routine!
Minimize direct unprotected exposure
toRisk
   blood   and body
       assessment for fluids
    appropriate
     SCENARIO use ofHAND
                     PPE                 GLOVES GOWN MEDICAL EYE-
                               HYGIENE                MASK WEAR
Always before and after
patient contact, and after        x
contaminated environment
If direct contact with blood
and body fluids,
secretions, excretions,           x        x
mucous membranes, non-
intact skin
If there is risk of splashes
onto the health care              x        x      x
worker’s body
If there is a risk of
splashes onto the body            x        x      x     x     x
and face
Principles for using PPE (1)
• Always clean your hands before and after wearing PPE
• PPE should be available where and when it is indicated
  •   in the correct size
  •   select according to risk or per transmission based precautions
• Always put on before contact with the patient
• Always remove immediately after completing the task and/or
  leaving the patient care area
• NEVER reuse disposable PPE
• Clean and disinfect reusable PPE between each use
Principles for using PPE (2)
• Change PPE immediately if it becomes contaminated or
  damaged
• PPE should not be adjusted or touched during patient care;
  specifically
  • never touch your face while wearing PPE
  • if there is concern and/or breach of these practices, leave
     the patient care area when safe to do so and properly
     remove and change the PPE
  • Always remove carefully to avoid self-contamination (from
     dirtiest to cleanest areas)
The seven steps to safe injections
1 Clean work space
2 Hand hygiene
3 Sterile safety-engineered syringe
4 Sterile vial of medication and diluent
5 Skin cleaning and antisepsis
6 Appropriate collection of sharps
7 Appropriate waste management
https://www.who.int/infection-prevention/tools/injections/training-education/en/
Environment cleaning, disinfection and
BMWM
    • It is important to ensure that environmental cleaning and
      disinfection procedures are followed consistently and correctly.
    • Thorough cleaning environmental surfaces with water and
      detergent and applying commonly used hospital level
      disinfectants (such as sodium hypochlorite, 0.5%, or ethanol,
      70%) are effective and sufficient procedures.
    • Medical devices and equipment, laundry, food service utensils
      and medical waste should be managed in accordance with safe
      routine procedures.
Triage, early recognition,
and source control
Manage ill patients seeking care
                                                Use clinical triage in
           Timely and                           health care facilities
                             Admit patients
         effective triage
          and infection
                              to dedicated      for early
                                  area
             control                            identification of
                                                patients with acute
                                                respiratory infection
                            Specific case and
          Safe transport
                                 clinical       (ARI) to prevent the
          and discharge
              home
                              management        transmission of
                               protocols
                                                pathogens to health
                                                care workers and
                                                other patients.
Triage (1)                            • Prevent overcrowding.
                                      • Conduct rapid triage.
                                      • Place ARI patients in dedicated waiting areas
        Timely and
         effective
                        Admit           with adequate ventilation.
                      patients to
        triage and
         infection
                      dedicated
                         area
                                      • In addition to standard precautions,
          control                       implement droplet precautions and contact
                                        precautions (if close contact with the patient
     Safe transport
                      Specific case     or contaminated equipment or
                       and clinical
     and discharge
                      management        surfaces/materials).
         home
                        protocols
                                      • Ask patients with respiratory symptoms to
                                        perform hand hygiene, wear a mask and
                                        perform respiratory hygiene.
                                      • Ensure at least 1 m distance between patients
Triage (2)
     The triage or screening area requires the
     following equipment:
     •   Screening questionnaire • Infrared thermometer
     •   Algorithm for triage    • Waste bins and access to
     •   Documentation papers      cleaning/disinfection
     •   PPE                     • Post signage in public
     •   Hand hygiene equipment areas with syndromic
         and posters               screening questions to
                                    instruct patients to alert
                                    HCWs.
Triage (3)
Set up of the area during triage:
1. Ensure adequate space for triage (maintain at least 1 m
   distance between staff screening and patient/staff entering)
2. Waiting room chairs for patients should be 1m apart
3. Maintain a one way flow for patients and for staff
4. Clear signage for symptoms and directions
5. Family members should wait outside the triage area-
   prevent triage area from overcrowding
Hospital admission
                                     • Place patients with ARI of potential
                                       concern in single, well ventilated room,
                                       when possible
      Timely and       Admit
       effective     patients to
      triage and     dedicated
       infection
        control
                        area         • Cohort patients with the same diagnosis
                                       in one area
                     Specific case
    Safe transport    and clinical
    and discharge
        home
                     management
                       protocols
                                     • Do not place suspect patients in same
                                       area as those who are confirmed.
                                     • Assign health care worker with
                                       experience with IPC and outbreaks.
Additional Precautions
Patients suspected or confirmed COVID-19 (1)
 •   Contact and droplet precautions for all patients with suspected or confirmed
     COVID-19
 •   Airborne precautions are recommended only for aerosol generating
     procedures (i.e. open suctioning of respiratory tract, intubation, bronchoscopy,
     cardiopulmonary resuscitation).
 •   Preferably patient should be in a single room:
         • natural ventilation with air flow of at least 160 L/s per patient or
         • in negative pressure rooms with at least 12 air changes per hour and
            controlled direction of air flow when using mechanical ventilation
 •   Cohort: All patients with respiratory illness should be in a single room, or
     minimum 1m away from other patients when waiting for a room
 •   Dedicated & trained HCW
 •   HCW to wear PPE: a medical mask, goggles or face shield, gown, and gloves
 •   Hand hygiene should be done any time the WHO “5 Moments” apply, and
     before PPE and after removing PPE
Patients suspected or confirmed COVID-19 (2)
 • Equipment should be single use when possible, dedicated to the
   patient and disinfected between uses
 • Avoid transporting suspected or confirmed cases – if necessary,
   have patients wear masks. HCW should wear appropriate PPE.
 • Routine cleaning of the environment is crucial
 • Limit the number of HCW, visitors, and family members who are in
   contact with the patient. If necessary, everyone must wear PPE.
 • All persons entering the patients room (including visitors) should be
   recorded (for contact tracing purposes).
 • Precautions should continue until the patient is asymptomatic.
Outpatient Care
       • The basic principles of IPC and standard precautions should be applied
         in all health care facilities, including outpatient care and primary care.
            • Triage and early recognition
            • emphasis on hand hygiene, respiratory hygiene
              and medical masks to be used by patients with
              respiratory symptoms (consider having signage);
            • if possible – place patients in separate rooms or
              away from other patients in the waiting rooms,
              and wear mask, gloves and gown if possible when
              seeing them in the clinic (as much of contact and
              droplet precautions as possible);
            • when symptomatic patients are required to wait,
              ensure they have a separate waiting area (1m
              separation);
            • prioritization of care of symptomatic patients;
            • educate patients and families about the early
              recognition of symptoms, basic precautions to be
              used and which health care facility they should
              refer to.
Additional Control
Measures
   Administrative Controls
• Provision of adequate training for HCWs;
• Ensuring an adequate patient-to-staff ratio;
• Establishing a surveillance process for acute respiratory infections potentially caused by
  COVID-19 among HCWs;
• Ensuring that HCWs and the public understand the importance of promptly seeking medical
  care;
• Monitoring HCW compliance with standard precautions and providing mechanisms for
  improvement as needed.
Home care for patients with suspected COVID-19
infection with mild symptoms
• Place the patient in a well-ventilated single room (i.e., with open windows and an
  open door).
• Limit the movement of the patient & minimize shared space
• Household members should stay in a different room or, if that is not possible,
  maintain a distance of at least 1 m from the ill person (e.g., sleep in a separate
  bed).
• Limit the number of caregivers - good health and has no underlying disease
• Visitors should not be allowed.
• Perform hand hygiene after contact with patients or their immediate
  environment, before and after preparing food, before eating, after using the
  toilet and whenever hands look dirty.
• To contain respiratory secretions, provide medical mask to the patient.
Home care for patients with suspected COVID-19 infection with
mild symptoms
• Individuals who cannot tolerate a medical mask should use rigorous respiratory hygiene
• Caregivers should wear a tightly fitted medical mask that covers their mouth and nose
  when in the same room as the patient
• Avoid direct contact with body fluids. Use disposable gloves and a mask when providing
  oral or respiratory care and when handling stool, urine and other waste. Perform hand
  hygiene before and after removing gloves and the mask.
• Use dedicated linen and eating utensils for the patient; these items should be cleaned with
  soap and water after use and may be re-used instead of being discarded.
• Clean and disinfect daily surfaces that are frequently touched in the room where the
  patient is being cared for (Household soap or detergent should be used first for cleaning,
  and then, after rinsing, regular household disinfectant-sodium hypochlorite)
• Clean the patient’s clothes, bed linen, and bath and hand towels using regular laundry soap
  and water or machine wash at 60–90 °C with common household detergent, and dry
  thoroughly
Use of masks
• Use of Mask- limit spread of certain respiratory diseases
• Mask alone is insufficient to provide the adequate level of protection
  and other equally relevant measures should be adopted – Hand
  hygiene
• Wearing medical masks when not indicated may cause
   • unnecessary cost
   • procurement burden
   • create a false sense of security that can lead to neglecting other essential
     measures such as hand hygiene practices.
• Using a mask incorrectly may hamper its effectiveness to reduce the
  risk of transmission.
             file:///C:/Users/Mala%20Chhabra/Downloads/WHO-nCov-IPC_Masks-2020.1-eng.pdf
Use of Mask : Community setting
• Individuals without respiratory symptoms
   •   Avoid closed crowded spaces
   •   Maintain distance – 1m
   •   Practice hand and respiratory hygiene
   •   Refrain from touching face, nose, mouth
   •   No need of mask
• Individuals with respiratory symptoms
   • Wear a medical mask
   • Seek medical care
   • Learn mask management
Use of Mask : Home care
• Individuals with suspected infection with mild respiratory symptoms
• Relatives or caregivers
Along with
• hand hygiene
• keep distance from affected individual as much as possible (at least 1
  meter)
• improve airflow in living space by opening windows as much as
  possible
• Mask management
Use of Mask : Health Care Settings
Individuals with respiratory symptoms should:
• wear a medical mask while waiting in triage or waiting areas or during
  transportation within the facility;
• wear a medical mask when staying in cohorting areas dedicated to
  suspected or confirmed cases;
• do not wear a medical mask when isolated in single rooms but cover
  mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing with disposable paper tissues.
Health care workers should:
• wear a medical mask while providing care to the patient
• Use a particulate respirator N95 (NIOSH certified) , FFP2 (EU standard), or
  equivalent, when performing aerosol generating procedures (tracheal intubation,
 non-invasive ventilation, tracheotomy, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, manual ventilation before intubation, and bronchoscopy.
Masks management
• place mask carefully to cover mouth and nose and tie securely to minimise any
  gaps between the face and the mask
• while in use, avoid touching the mask
• remove the mask by using appropriate technique (i.e. do not touch the front but
  remove the lace from behind)
• after removal or whenever you inadvertently touch a used mask, clean hands by
  using an alcohol-based hand rub or soap and water if visibly soiled
• replace masks with a new clean, dry mask as soon as they become damp/humid
• do not re-use single-use masks
• discard single-use masks after each use and dispose of them immediately upon
  removal
Conclusions
• IPC is key for containment
• Based on key principles- Hand Hygiene, Respiratory etiquette, safe
  distance
• Hospital Infection Prevention & control- Standard & Additional
  precautions
   • Protect Yourself and the community
   • Triage & Admissions
   • PPE
      • Judicious and Appropriate use
      • Pay attention to donning and doffing
• Home care precautions
Resources
• WHO Coronavirus Homepage
• https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-
  coronavirus-2019
• All coronavirus (COVID-19) technical guidance documents
• https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-
  coronavirus-2019/technical-guidance
• IPC documents
• https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-
  coronavirus-2019/technical-guidance/infection-prevention-
  and-control
• https://www.who.int/infection-
  prevention/publications/en/
• Questions and Answers
• https://www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/q-a-
  coronaviruses
Thank you