Infection Control
RSSArticles
-
CDC Recommends Antiviral Treatments Due to Flu Vaccine Mismatch
The predominant circulating influenza virus this season is a poor match with the vaccine, meaning that antiviral drug treatments may be critical for the protection of high-risk patients.
-
How Can an ASC Ensure Infection Control Compliance?
An infection control and prevention quality improvement project should be based on a set of standards. These standards start with federal, state, and local regulations, as well as industry standards.
-
ASCs Can Use the CMS Infection Control Checklist to Their Advantage
The ASC Infection Control Surveyor Worksheet could serve as a good tool for ASC administrators to use when assessing their own infection control and prevention policies and procedures.
-
ASCs Must Work Harder to Prevent Aerosol Infectants
Infection control and prevention measures, along with using the most effective filters, can help prevent aerosol infectants, including prions.
-
Evidence That Working ‘Bare Below the Elbows’ Protects Patients
A study using two mannequins and a surrogate DNA marker for Clostridium difficile showed that workers in long sleeves were more likely to contaminate a subsequent patient than workers wearing short sleeves.
-
Antibiotic Stewardship Requires Hospitalwide Commitment
Hospitals can play an important role in addressing one of the most urgent public health problems today: the misuse and overuse of antimicrobials. An effective antibiotic stewardship program requires significant commitment from top executive levels down to the bedside.
-
NIOSH Issues PPE Conformity Assessment Document
Employee health professionals questioning whether their supplies of personal protective equipment are up to date with current performance standards may want to consult new guidelines issued by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
-
Rare or Unreported? HCW Injuries During Emergency Codes
When a “code blue” is called for immediate patient resuscitation, healthcare personnel rush to the bedside to instigate life-saving measures that may be physically demanding and go on for a prolonged time. How often are healthcare workers injured when performing a code, and what are the primary risks?
-
Opioid Fears Recall Beginning of HIV Epidemic
The national opioid epidemic has triggered an irrational fear that is reminding clinicians of the initial reactions to HIV in the 1980s. Part of this is being driven by the new powerful synthetic opioids, such as carfentanil, making their way to the street in a variety of illicit substances.
-
Vaccine May Not Cover H3N2 — Is It Time for Universal Flu Shot?
A potential mismatch between the current flu vaccine and a strain of H3N2 influenza that has caused severe infections in the Southern Hemisphere suggests this may be a harsh season in the United States and underscores the need for new vaccine production methods, public health officials emphasized in a recently published commentary.