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Getting Started or so you are the new Infection Preventionist – what now? Karen Hoover Russ Olmsted Ruth Anne Rye.

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Presentation on theme: "Getting Started or so you are the new Infection Preventionist – what now? Karen Hoover Russ Olmsted Ruth Anne Rye."— Presentation transcript:

1 Getting Started or so you are the new Infection Preventionist – what now? Karen Hoover Russ Olmsted Ruth Anne Rye

2 Support New Hire Orientation All personnel Personnel specific Ongoing Regulatory mandate Task-specific Facility-determined Pre-placement evaluation Routine screening Work restrictions Occupational exposure management Personal hygiene Blood Stream - Eyes, Ears & Throat Gastrointestinal, Genitourinary Tract - Skin Respiratory Tract – Central Nervous System -- - Dental Service Dietary Services Equipment: Cleaning Disinfection/Sterilization Environmental Cleaning Emergency preparedness Facility operations; air, water construction/renovation Laboratory/Pathology Waste management Employee Health Prevention Body System Review Leadership Education Clinical Practice Support Services Surveillance/ Performance Measurement MI MODEL: INFECTION PREVENTION PROGRAM  MSIPC Reviewed 2013 Scope: Processes & outcomes Patient: Community & Healthcare- Associated Infection Personnel: Health & Injury Prevention Environment of Care (EOC) Outbreak and Sentinel Events Philosophy-Authority-Responsibility I.P. Program Elements Patient & Personnel Safety Culture Oversight: Function and Committees Performance Improvement Regulatory Compliance Community Standards of Care Antimicrobial use Asepsis Continuum of care Hand Hygiene Immunization Isolation Precautions Patient Care Plan

3  Is there a facility-specific Infection Prevention & Control Plan? Infection Prevention & Control Program Plan  Risk Assessment:  Assessment of services provided  Assessment of populations served  Prioritized strategies for risk reduction  Surveillance plan including data analysis  Plan is reviewed annually or as often as needed

4 Evaluation of potential risk for infections, contamination and exposures among population served by the facility; 1)Sources of information: known risks, historical data, local public health, publically reportable data, reports in literature, etc. – Do you have any surveillance data available? 2)Evaluation of preventable harms [HAIs, falls, pressure ulcers, inter-facility transfers] 3)Evaluation of organization’s preparedness to eliminate or mitigate the harm or risk of preventable harm

5 Setting Services & Care Delivery  Descriptive analysis – Geographic area served – Environmental factors – Populations served – Breakdown of major payors – CMS survey requirements – Local public agency: county population assessment  Care, Treatment & Services Provided  Skilled care, Rehab, Long Term Acute Care, Home care/Hospice, Critical access hospital  Surgery, medicine, both  Critical care?  Obstetrics?  Combination of acute + LTC?

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7  Multidisciplinary team – Employee health, environmental services, lab, pharmacy, nursing, administration etc.  Perform at least annually – Remember to update if new services are added  Review & approval by IPC and/or Patient Safety/Quality Committee  Organization/committee consensus for priorities

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9 Priority Level = 1 (top)  Topic: Catheter Associated UTI (CAUTI)  Goal- Achieve zero CAUTIs in medical surgical patients by  December 2012  Objectives -  1. Provide CAUTI prevention education for 95% of clinical staff by June 2012  2. Implement Nurse protocol for Foley catheter removal by June 2012  Strategies/Tactics -  1. Develop educational program  2. Schedule in-services for med surg nursing  3. Develop nurse driven Foley catheter removal criteria  Evaluation  Progress/Analysis/Reporting

10 Let’s Practice shall we?


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