DEVELOPMENT SITE ONLY
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
CLINICAL AREAS
Staff
- Carry out regular and thorough hand hygiene
- Cover all cuts and grazes with waterproof dressings
- Know hepatitis B status
- Up-to-date with all vaccination
- Report any symptoms of diarrhoea and/or vomiting developed when off-duty to the occupational health team
- remain off work until symptom-free for 48 hrs
- Report any symptoms of vomiting and/or diarrhoea while on duty to the staff member in charge
- inform your line manager
- return home until 48 hr after your symptoms have stopped
- Report any skin lesions or recurrent infections to the occupational health team
Patients
- Assess patients for infection risk on admission, before admission if possible and throughout their stay
- Check IC alert for any infection prevention alerts
- Consider infection risk in placement decisions
- Isolate patients with conditions that increase the risk of spreading micro-organisms to others
- suspected or known infectious diarrhoea
- exfoliative skin condition, large open wound
- productive cough
- Encourage patients to clean their hands
- before meals
- before taking oral medication
- after using the toilet, commode or bedpan/urinal
- at other times as appropriate
- Good oral hygiene
- consider use of oral chlorhexidine
Environment
- Maintain clean and dust-free environment
- Use hospital approved products for daily cleaning of hard surfaces in all adult areas
- Increase levels of cleaning in outbreak situations
- infection prevention team (IPT) will advise domestic services and ward manager on frequency and type of cleaning
General equipment
- Use single patient use or disposable equipment where possible
- Never attempt to decontaminate or reuse single use items
- Decontaminate reusable equipment after use
- Use hospital approved products
- Follow manufacturers' instructions for cleaning
Personal protective equipment (PPE)
- For invasive procedures, during contact with sterile sites, non-intact skin and mucous membranes, and when handling sharps and contaminated equipment, wear gloves
- When there is a risk that clothing or uniform will become contaminated, or there is close contact with a patient, wear disposable apron
- Use fresh apron and gloves for each patient and for each different care activity on the same patient
- If risk of extensive splashing, wear full-body fluid-repellent gown
- If risk of splashing into eyes or mouth, wear eye and face protection
- For multi-drug resistant pulmonary tuberculosis, SARS, COVID-19, wear an FFP3 mask which previously has been fit-tested to ensure it is effective.
- For more details see PPE guideline
Linen, waste and sharps
- Wear appropriate PPE
- Handle linen and waste correctly
- place soiled linen in skip at bedside
- place clinical waste in orange bag
- Use needle safety devices where there are clear indications that they will provide safer systems of working for healthcare staff
- Take sharps box (with blue tray) to point of use
- dispose of the sharp directly immediately into the sharps container after use
- never leave sharps for someone not involved in procedure to clear away
- Never re-sheath needles
- Dispose of needles attached to syringes as a single unit
- Do not fill sharps containers above the manufacturers marked line which indicates that they are full
Microbes isolated
- If alerted to identification of specific organism, see ESBL/MGNB/CARB, MRSA management or C-difficile infection guidelines
Antimicrobials
- Use antimicrobials rationally. See appropriate guideline in Medical, Surgical or Antimicrobial prescribing guidelines
- use narrow spectrum agents whenever possible with aid of microbiology results
- document clinical indication and reason for choice in medical records
- document clinical indication, route and duration on prescription chart
Review regularly
- Switch IV antimicrobials to oral route after 48 hr where possible
- Stop antimicrobials after a total of 5 days treatment (including IV treatment) unless a specific infection justifies an extended duration of treatment
- Review (consultant or SpR) indication for all prescribed gastric acid suppression
- If there is a compelling indication to prescribe acid suppression in a patient at risk of Cdifficile Infection:
- prefer H2 antagonist to PPI
- minimise dose and duration to the safest minimum