MVP of Infection Control Team: The Patient.

Do not touch me unless you have HH since you touched the privacy curtainHospitals and other healthcare providers work hard to prevent healthcare-acquired infections, but patients can and should help. It’s the patient’s right and responsibility to ask questions, remind providers about hand hygiene, and take any other protective action they can. Those responsibilities naturally pass to the trusted advocate when the patient is not well enough to fulfill them. It’s clearly in everyone’s best interest for providers to make patients aware of their role as active participants in their own care and safety.

The patient pictured here happens to know about privacy curtains as a source of contamination, and to request hand hygiene (HH). Most patients or their advocates will likely need to ask their providers open-ended questions about best practices for all-cause harm reduction.

Here are some useful resources for patient education:

Preventing Infections in the Hospital – from the National Patient Safety Foundation

15 Steps You Can Take To Reduce Your Risk of a Hospital Infection – from the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths

Hospital Acquired Conditions and Patient Safety in Hospitals – from HeathCare.gov is a mother lode of resources …

… including the WAVE (Wash, Ask, Vaccinate, Ensure safety) campaign materials.

You may have noticed that the tagline on the healthcare.gov site is “Take health care into your own hands.”  We wholeheartedly agree. Just remember to wash those hands first.

Infection Prevention and Control Programs: Cohesion and Consistency

Infection Prevention and Control Programs: Cohesion and ConsistencyThe fight against hospital-acquired infections is multifaceted. We at PurThread are proud to be addressing an essential part of that fight: soft surface contamination. Hand washing protocols, maintenance procedures, error-avoidance checklists, and training each make substantive contributions to infection prevention and control. Proper preparation for dealing with infections in most healthcare facilities requires a well-designed and maintained infection control program. Without such a program, addressing infection control would seem like a game of whack-a-mole.

In this day and age, infection control programs are commonplace. However, preparedness for dealing with infectious diseases still varies widely. In “How Prepared are Hospitalists to Handle Infectious Disease Cases?” (The Hospitalist, April 2012) infectious disease physician Dr. Leland Allen describes how a comprehensive infection control program can overcome variations in hospital personnel training and help all staff address the specific types of infections that might be found at their institutions. The payoff is manifested by reduced infection rates and better support for staff physicians.

Resources for hospital and healthcare facility infection control program development and monitoring abound. Here are just a few:

Developing an Infection Control Program

CDC guidelines for infection control

8 Steps to Effective Hospital Infection Control Programs

What are the resources you found most helpful in designing your infection prevention and control program? And which components of your infection control program do you consider most critical?