TWO
STANDARD PRECAUTIONS
BACKGROUND
In 1985, largely because of the emergence of HIV/AIDS, guidelines for
protecting healthcare workers from becoming infected with HIV and other
bloodborne infections (e.g., HCV) were quickly developed and became
known as Universal Precautions (UP). Almost from the moment they were
issued and hospitals and clinics began implementing them, it was
recognized that this new strategy, while protecting hospital personnel
(patient-to-personnel transmission), sacrificed some measures of
preventing patient-to-patient and personnel-to-patient transmission.
At nearly the same time that UP were being introduced, a new system of
health worker and patient precautions was proposed as an alternative to
the diagnosis-driven UP (Lynch et al 1987). This approach, called Body
Substance Isolation (BSI), focused on protecting patients and health
personnel from all moist and potentially infected body substances
(secretions and excretions), not just blood. BSI was based primarily on the
use of gloves. Personnel were instructed to put on clean gloves just before
touching mucous membranes or nonintact skin, and before anticipated
contact with moist body fluids (e.g., blood, semen, vaginal secretions,
wound drainage, sputum, saliva, amniotic fluid, etc.).
BSI quickly gained acceptance over UP because it was simple, easy to
learn and implement, and acknowledged that all patients, not just those
diagnosed or with symptoms, may be infected and therefore not free of
risk to other patients or staff. Disadvantages of BSI included the added
cost of protective barrier equipment, particularly gloves, difficulty in
maintaining routine use of the protocol for all patients, uncertainty about
precautions for patients in isolation rooms and the overuse of gloves to
protect staff at the expense of patients (Patterson et al 1991).
As a consequence, by the early 1990s healthcare facilities and staff were
totally confused regarding what to do about patient and staff precaution
guidelines. For example, some hospitals had implemented UP while others
had implemented BSI. Indeed, even hospitals and staff that thought they
were following UP were really using BSI, and vice versa. There was also
much local variation in interpretation and use of both UP and BSI, and a
variety of combinations was common. Moreover, there was continued lack
of agreement about the role of handwashing when gloves were used. This
confusion, coupled with the need to use additional precautions to prevent
diseases spread by airborne, droplet and contact routes, were major
limitations of BSI (Rudnick et al 1993).
In view of these problems and concerns, no simple merging together of
UP or BSI appeared likely to solve them. What has emerged since then is
a new system that provides a single set of isolation guidelines with
logistically feasible recommendations for preventing the many infections
that occur in healthcare facilities through all known modes of
transmission.
STANDARD PRECAUTIONS
The new guidelines issued by CDC in 1996 involve a two-level approach:
ü Standard Precautions, which apply to all clients and patients
attending healthcare facilities, and
ü Transmission-Based Precautions, which apply only to hospitalized
patients (Garner and HICPAC 1996).
As briefly presented, this new system retains features of
both UP and BSI. Moreover, it replaces the cumbersome disease-specific
isolation precautions with three sets of transmission-based precautions for
use in hospitalized patients.
Because most people with bloodborne viral infections such as HIV and
HBV do not have symptoms, nor can they be visibly recognized as being
infected, Standard Precautions are designed for the care of all persons—
patients, clients and staff—regardless of whether or not they are infected.
Standard Precautions apply to blood and all other body fluids, secretions
and excretions (except sweat), non-intact skin and mucous membranes.
Their implementation is meant to reduce the risk of transmitting
microorganisms from known or unknown sources of infection (e.g.,
patients, contaminated objects, used needles and syringes, etc.) within the
healthcare system. Applying Standard Precautions has become the primary
strategy to preventing nosocomial infections in hospitalized patients.
KEY COMPONENTS AND THEIR USE
The key components of the Standard Precautions and their use are outlined. Placing a physical, mechanical or chemical barrier between
microorganisms and an individual—whether a woman coming for
antenatal care, a hospitalized patient or healthcare worker—is a highly
effective means of preventing the spread of infections (i.e., the barrier
serves to break the disease transmission cycle). For example, the following
actions create protective barriers for preventing infections in clients,
patients and healthcare workers and provide the means for implementing
the new Standard Precautions:
ü Consider every person (patient or staff) as potentially infectious and
susceptible to infection.
ü
ü Wear gloves (both hands) before touching anything wet—broken skin,
mucous membranes, blood or other body fluids, or soiled instruments
and contaminated waste materials—or before performing invasive
procedures.
- After touching blood, body fluids, secretions, excretions and contaminated items
- Immediately after removing gloves
- Between patient contact
Gloves
Ø For contact with blood, body fluids, secretions and contaminated items
Ø For contact with mucous membranes and nonintact skin
Masks, goggles, face masks
Ø Protect mucous membranes of eyes, nose and mouth when contact with blood and body fluids is likely
Gowns
Ø Protect skin from blood or body fluid contact
Ø Prevent soiling of clothing during procedures that may involve contact with blood
Ø or body fluids
Linen
Ø Handle soiled linen to prevent touching skin or mucous membranes
Patient care equipment
Ø Handle soiled equipment in a manner to prevent contact with skin or mucous
membranes and to prevent contamination of clothing or the environment
Environmental cleaning
Ø Routinely care, clean and disinfect equipment and furnishings in patient care areas
Sharps
Ø Avoid recapping used needles
Ø Avoid removing used needles from disposable syringes
Ø Avoid bending, breaking or manipulating used needles by hand
Ø Place used sharps in puncture-resistant containers
Patient resuscitation
Ø Use mouthpieces, resuscitation bags or other ventilation devices to avoid mouth-tomouth
resuscitation
Patient placement
Ø Place patients who contaminate the environment or cannot maintain appropriate
hygiene in private rooms
§ Use physical barriers (protective goggles, face masks and aprons) if
splashes and spills of any body fluids (secretions and excretions) are
likely (e.g., cleaning instruments and other items).
§ Use antiseptic agents for cleansing the skin or mucous membrane
prior to surgery, cleaning wounds, or doing handrubs or surgical
handscrubs with an alcohol-based antiseptic product.
§ Use safe work practices such as not recapping or bending needles,
safely passing sharp instruments and suturing, when appropriate, with
blunt needles.
§ Safely dispose of infectious waste materials to protect those who
handle them and prevent injury or spread of infection to the
community.
§ Process instruments, gloves and other items after use by first
decontaminating and thoroughly cleaning them, then either sterilizing
or high-level disinfecting them using the recommended procedures.
1 comment:
in ur title put Lecture: Standard Precaution ;-) and in the labels put Lecture...
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