Infection Control
In order to provide better and safer hospital facilities
for its patients and personnel, the Health Care
Institution has to adopt a programme of infection
control involving all sections of the Health Care
Centre.
A satisfactory infection control programme
requires the co-operation of all personnel involved
with patients. Any break in technique or lapse in
discipline on the part of one person can render the
efforts of a number of conscientious individuals
ineffective. It is only through co-operative efforts of
every member of the staff that nonsocomial
infections can be prevented.
Nonsocomial infections are defined as infections
acquired during or as a result of hospitalisation. The
patients neither have these infections nor are
incubating these infections on admission. Generally
a patient who develops an infection after 48 hours of
hospitalisation is considered to have nosocomial
infection. However, nonsocomial infection may not
manifest as disease immediately and may manifest as
disease only after discharge.
Infections and precautions in a hospital
Objectives of an infection control
programme
- To develop written policies and procedures for
standards of cleanliness, sanitation and asepsis in
the hospital
- To interpret, uphold and implement the hospital
infection control policies and procedures in
specific situations
- To provide surveillance for nonsocomial infections
- To review and analyse data on infections that
occur, in order to take corrective steps
- To develop a mechanism to supervise infection
control measures in all phases of hospital activities
- To provide for continuing education of
employees on infection control aspects
Several surveys of infections in developed countries
have shown that occupationally acquired infections are
greatest among some categories of health care workers
(HCW) such as medical and technical staff, attenders
and cleaners, while such risk is low among secretarial
staff. This is essentially because of their coming into
contact with pathogens or infected specimens.
The most effective method of preventing
occupationally acquired infections is adopting safe
working practices. Based on the risk assessment of
the staff, specific protection may be recommended.
The assessment takes into account the pathogens they
may be exposed to, the local epidemiology of the
disease, the nature of specimens/infective material
handled the frequency of exposure/contact with
potentially infected material or patient. Staff
considered to be at risk should be offered specific
protection, including immunisation.
Safety education must be given at the time of
employment. A video on universal precautions should
be screened and the employee should secure a certain
score on a questionnaire that follows. All staff should
be informed of the need to report exposure to blood
or potentially infectious body fluids to the duty doctor
without any delay. Other health and safety education
should also be carried out as appropriate.
Rules of universal precautions
- - Consider all patients potentially infectious
- - Assume all blood and body fluids and tissue
contaminated with blood borne pathogens
- - Assume all unsterile needles and other sharps are
similarly contaminated
What does one need to do?
- Hand washing: Hands should be washed if
contaminated with blood or body fluids and after
removing the gloves
- All HCWs should routinely use appropriate
barrier precautions when exposure to blood or potentially infected body fluids is anticipated.
These include:
- - Use of gloves for contact with blood,
potentially infectious body fluids, mucous
membranes or non-intact skin in ALL
patients. Gloves should also be used for
handling items or surfaces soiled with blood
or body fluids and for performing
venipuncture or other vascular access
procedures. Gloves should be removed before
leaving the patient’s bedside
- - Masks and protective eyewear should be used
for procedures likely to generate droplets of
body fluids or blood that could lead to
contamination of eyes, nose, or mouth
- - Appropriate protective clothing such as
gowns, aprons, surgical caps, and impervious
shoes should be worn if there is a risk of
exposure. The type and characteristics of the
attire worn will depend on the task and degree
of exposure anticipated. All protective
clothing and equipment must be properly
discarded or decontaminated before leaving
the work area
- Proper disposal of needles and sharps: Needles
and sharps are the commonest mode of
transmission of blood borne pathogens to
HCWs. Precautions should be taken to prevent
injuries by sharp instruments, especially hollow
bore needles that have been used for
venipuncture or other vascular access procedures
- - Needles should not be recapped, bent or
broken by hand. Disposal needles and other
sharps should be disposed of immediately after
use into puncture resistant containers which
should be located at the site of the procedure
- - If a needle has to be removed from a syringe,
use forceps or do it with utmost care
- - Do not overfill a sharps container
- Disinfection of instruments: Re-use instruments,
tubings, etc. only after decontamination and
sterilization. Do not touch the equipment with
soiled gloves or gloves used for patient care.
Surfaces of large equipment should be disinfected
with 1:100 dilution of sodium hypochlorite or
an approved disinfectant. Heavily soiled
equipment may require additional cleaning with
detergent and water. Gloves must be worn while
cleaning the equipment
- Waste Disposal : Non plastic items soiled with
blood, bloody drainage, or potentially infected
material must be placed in the yellow biohazard
plastic bags. Items that may tear the bag must
not be put into the bag. Excreta, blood or body
fluids must be emptied down the drain with
adequate amount of water
- Linen: Linen soiled with blood or potentially
infectious body fluid must be soaked in Lysol
for 60 minutes, placed in a leak proof bag and
sent to the laundry
- Spill clean up: Cover spills of blood or body
fluids with Dakins solution or 1:10 to 1:100
dilution of freshly prepared sodium hypochlorite
or household bleach for 10 minutes. Then mop
dry. A second decontamination may be done if
required. Wash the area with detergent and water.
Gloves must be worn during cleanup and
decontamination procedures
Disinfection and sterilisation
Sterilisation is defined as a process where all microbes
are removed from a defined object, inclusive of
bacterial endospores. Disinfection is a process where
most microbes are removed from a defined object or
surface, except bacterial endispores. Certain chemicals
are capable of sterilising an object if exposed for long
periods of time, and serve as disinfectants at shorter
exposure time. However, a common practice is to
call all chemical agents as disinfectants - a misnomer.
Disinfectants can be classified according to their
ability to destroy these categories of microorganisms.
The agent which destroys only vegetative bacteria is
termed a low level disinfectant. If the agent is capable
of rendering myco-bacteria non-viable it is termed as
intermediate level disinfectant. It is a safe assumption
that all the other categories of microbes which are
classified more susceptible are also destroyed if efficacy
against myco- bacteria can be demonstrated. High
level disinfection is in other words sterilisation
wherein all microbial life is destroyed inclusive of
endospores.
Housekeeping and infection control
The following procedures need to be followed by
the housekeeping department in order to maintain a
zero percent infection rate in the hospital:
- The floor should be cleaned at least 4 times in
24 hours. Detergents and copious amount of
water should be used during one cleaning. Lysol
or any other equivalent disinfectant may be used
to mop the floor for the remaining times
- The walls are to be washed with a brush, using
detergent and water once a week
- High dusting should be done once a week with a
wet mop
- Fans and lights should be cleaned with soap and
water once a month. This should be handled by
the electrical department
- All work surfaces are to be disinfected by wiping
with 7% Lysol and then cleaned with detergent
and water twice a day
- Cupboards, shelves, beds, lockers, IV stands,
stools and other fixtures are to be cleaned with
detergent and water once a week
- Curtains should be changed once a month or
whenever soiled. These curtains are to be sent for
regular laundering. In certain high risk areas such
as the ICU and transplant units more frequent
changes are required
- Patient’s cot is to be cleaned every week with
detergent and water. 7% Lysol is to be used when
soiled with blood or body fluids. In the isolation
ward, cleaning is to be done daily
- Store rooms should be mopped once a day and
high dusted once a week
- The floor of bathrooms is to be cleaned with a
broom and detergents once a day. For disinfection
7% Lysol can be used
- Toilets are cleaned with a brush using a detergent
twice a day. Disinfection may be done using 7%
Lysol. A stain removing liquid can be used once
a month to remove stains
- Wash basins are to be cleaned with vim powder
every morning and with the stain removing liquid
once a month
- Regular AC maintenance is a must. The AC
section should draw up a protocol for this
Infection control in the linen
department
- - Bed linen is to be changed once in 2 days and
whenever soiled with blood and body fluids
- - Patient’s gown is to be changed every day and
whenever soiled with blood and body fluids
- - Dry dirty linen is to be sent to the laundry for
regular wash
- - Linen soiled with blood or body fluids and all
linen used by patients diagnosed to have HIV,
HBV, and MRSA is to be decontaminated in
the ward by soaking in 7% Lysol for at least 1
hour and then sent to the laundry
Rubber goods
Rubber goods are to be cleaned with soap and water,
disinfected with 7% Lysol, dried in the sun, sprinkled
with powder, rolled and stored.
Thermometer solution
Separate thermometers are recommended in intensive
care units, nurseries and transplant units. In areas
where a common thermometer is used, it is
disinfected between patients by immersing it in
thermometer solution (containing alcohol) for 5
minutes. After disinfection, the thermometer is
washed and kept dry or immersed in alcohol. Empty
the water from the container when not in use, and
keep it dry. The thermometer solution should be
changed once in three days. The date of change of
the thermometer solution should be written on an
adhesive tape which is stuck to the tray.
Miscellaneous items
K basins, bed pans, urinals, etc. are to be cleaned
with vim powder and water and disinfected with
7% Lysol.
Metal buckets are to be cleaned with vim powder
every week. Dustbins are to be cleaned with detergent
and water every morning and then with dettol
solution.
Housekeeping in the isolation ward
Before admission
The admitting physician should inform the sister in
charge of Isolation Ward at least one hour prior to
admission, mentioning the diagnosis, sex and the
general state of the patient.
Pre-requisites for Isolation
- - A source of running water should be available at
the entrance of each room to facilitate hand washing
- - The mattress and pillow should have an
impervious cover such as mackintosh so that it
can easily be damp dusted
- - Clean gowns should always be available
- - Separate urinals, bed pans and thermometers are
to be used for each patient
- - A bin lined with appropriate colour coded plastic
cover should be available in each room for
disposal of medical waste
- - Rooms should be isolated according to disease
conditions and should be well lit
Cleaning procedure for isolation ward
- Linen should be stripped from the bed taking
care not to shake the linen during this action.
The linen should then be soaked in 7% lysol
solution before sending to the laundry
- All other articles like IV stands, and furniture
should be cleaned with detergent and disinfected
with 7% Lysol solution
- Walls should be cleaned with detergent and
disinfected with 7% lysol
- The bathrooms should be cleaned with detergent
and disinfected with 7% Lysol
At discharge (terminal disinfection)
- - Keep an ultra-violet light in the room facing each
direction for half an hour in a 2 bedded room
and 1 hour in a 4 bedded room
- - The pillows and mattress are to be cleaned with
detergent, disinfected with 7% Lysol and dried
in sunlight for 24 hours
- - Bed sheets, curtains, gowns and dusters must be
removed, soaked in 7% Lysol for one hour and
then sent to the laundry
- - After disinfection, wash the room, walls,
windows, doors, bathrooms, sink and furniture
with soap solution after doing thorough high
dusting in that cubicle
- - Soaked bed pan, urinal, kidney basin in Lysol
solution for one hour, wash with detergent and
dry it under sunlight
- - Bath basins, multi-bin, bucket, jugs, mugs are
washed with solution and dried in sunlight
- - Rubber sheets are to be cleaned with Lysol, dried,
powdered and replaced
- - Soak the thermometer tray and its contents in
7% Lysol after cleaning. Utensils used by the
patient are washed, boiled and replaced
Housekeeping in the operation theatre
Theatre complex should be absolutely clean at all
times. Dust should not accumulate at any region in
the theatre.
Soap solution is recommended for cleaning floors
and other surfaces. Operating rooms (ORs) are
cleaned daily and the entire theatre complex is cleaned
thoroughly once a week.
Before the start of the first case
Wipe all furniture, equipment, room lights, suction
points, OR table, surgical light reflectors, other light
fittings, slabs with soap solution. This should be
completed at least one hour before the surgery.
After each case
Linen and gloves
Gather all soiled linen and towels in the receptacles
provided. Take them to the service corridor (behind
the theatre) and place them in trolleys to be taken
for sorting. The dirty linen is then sent to the laundry.
Use gloves while handling soiled linen.
Instruments
Used instruments are cleaned immediately by the
scrub nurse and the attender. Reusable sharps are
decontaminated in Lysol / hypochlorite and then
washed in the room adjacent to the respective OR
by scrubbing with a brush, liquid soap and vim. They
are then sent for sterilization in the TSSU. In the
septic theatre alone the instruments are sent in the
instrument tray for autoclaving. Once disinfected,
they are taken back to the same instrument cleaning
area for a manual wash described earlier. They are
then packed and re-autoclaved before use.
Environment
Wipe used equipment, furniture, OR table, etc. with
detergent and water. If there is a blood spill, disinfect
with sodium hypochlorite before wiping.
Empty and clean suction bottles and tubing with
disinfectant.
After the last case
The same procedure as mentioned above is followed
and in addition, the following are carried out.
- - Wipe overhead lights, cabinets, waste receptacles,
equipment, furniture with a detergent
- - Wash floor and wet mop with liquid soap and
then remove water and wet mop with a
disinfectant solution
- - Clean the storage shelves, scrub and clean sluice
room
Weekly cleaning procedure
- - Remove all portable equipment
- - Damp wipe lights and other fixture with detergent
- - Clean doors, hinges, facings, glass inserts, and
rinse with a cloth moistened with detergent
- - Wipe down walls with clean cloth mop with
detergent
- - Scrub floor using detergent and water
- - Stainless steel surfaces - clean with detergent, rinse
and clean with warm water
- - Replace portable equipment: clean wheel castors
by rolling across toweling saturated with detergent
- - Wash (clean) and dry all furniture and equipment.
(OR table, suction holders, foot and sitting
stools, Mayo stands, IV poles, basin stands, Xray
view boxes, hamper stands, all tables in the
room, hoses to oxygen tank, kick buckets and
holder, and wall cupboards)
- - After washing floors, allow disinfectant solution
to remain on the floor for 5 minutes to ensure
destruction of bacteria
- - Do not remove or disturb delicate equipment
- - While wiping cabinets, see to it that the solution
does not get inside and contaminate sterile supplies
- - Operating rooms and scrub rooms should never
be dry dusted
Maintenance and repairs
- - Machinery and equipment should be checked,
cleaned and repaired routinely on Sundays
- - Urgent repairs should be carried out at the end
of the days list
- - Air conditioners and suction points should be
checked, cleaned and repaired on a weekly basis.
- - Preventive maintenance on all theatre equipment
is to be carried out every Saturday, and major
work to be done at least once a year.
Student exercise
Answer the following
- What are the steps needed to be taken to keep the
hospital infection free?
- What measures does housekeeping take in the OT?
- What is the role of housekeeping in keeping the
hospital free of any infection?