Celebrating Nurses’ Monumental Impact
There is a myriad of ways to participate in National Nurses Week, which is celebrated May 6-12, from honoring your staff RNs with a gift or event to taking steps to let...
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By: Janie Thomas
Published: 10/10/2007
If a bioterrorist event were to occur in your area, your facility could be used as a triage unit. Here's how to safely handle and contain potentially lethal materials.
Standard precautions
The CDC's Standard Precautions are available at writeOutLink("www.cdc.gov/ncidod/hip/ISOLAT/std_prec_excerpt.htm",1). They apply to blood and other body fluids, skin not intact and mucous membranes, and are designed to reduce the risk of transmitting infectious organisms. All recommendations are 1B - strongly recommended for implementation and supported by some experimental, clinical or epidemiologic studies and strong theoretical rationale. The Standard Precautions cover nine areas.
1. Handwashing. In the event of an outbreak, use antimicrobial or antiseptic agents immediately after any patient contact. Wash hands immediately after you remove gloves; wash hands and other skin immediately if you come into contact with blood or other body fluids.
2. Gloves. Wear clean gloves at all times, changing them between tasks. Latex is the gold standard for quality, barrier protection, fit and economy in gloves. Low protein, powder-free gloves would be the best selection for any bioterrorist agent.
For healthcare workers who are allergic to natural rubber latex, many other synthetic materials maintain an appropriate barrier against bioterrorist agents. Choices include nitrile (this material comes in examination gloves only) neoprene (or polychloroprene; manufactured in both exam and surgical gloves) polyisoprene (the newest material on the market has barrier properties that are fair to good; it would not be acceptable for use with a bioterrorist agent) and PVC (commonly known as vinyl; it's also unnacceptable to use with a bioterrorist agent, as studies show 63 percent of these exam gloves leak after normal use).
3. Mask, eye protection and face shield. Wear all three in any situation in which patient body fluids might be splashed. A visor and a mask with a .01-micron filter are advisable.
Thumbnail Sketches of Six Key Bioterrorism Agents |
The CDC has grouped bioterrorism agents into three categories - from most likely to least likely: A, B and C - based on the likelihood of their use as a biological weapon. Here's a rundown of the precautions you'd need to take for six biological agents in category A.
- Janie Thomas, RN, BSN, MA |
4. Gown. Wear an appropriate gown, removing a soiled one as soon as possible. According to Plymouth Meeting, Pa.-based ECRI, you should wear at minimum a gown that provides what the organization calls Level C protection. Materials that provide this degree of protection are uncoated, spun-bonded and good for particulate and fiber exposure. This is roughly equivalent to a Level 2 gown, as prescribed in the voluntary standards for manufacturers produced by the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentations, the FDA and the American Society for Testing and Materials. Even better would be a gown that provides Level B protection (equivalent to Level 3 in the voluntary standards) this material will be spun-bonded and coated with some type of plastic, which provides good chemical and fluid resistance.
5. Patient-care equipment. Wear proper PPE to handle soiled patient-care equipment. Avoid contact with patients when handling used, soiled patient-care equipment that's in contact with a patient, such as IVs, linens and blood-pressure cuffs. Such equipment should be either reprocessed according to accepted methods before the next use or disposed of properly.
6. Environmental control. Ensure thorough cleaning and disinfection of all surfaces, especially beds, chairs and other surfaces touched often by patients. If you're cleaning blood or other bodily fluids, contain the contamination in the immediate area; use disinfectants that are EPA- and OSHA-approved for such applications. Air should flow from clean to dirty to prevent airborne spread of disease.
7. Linen. Handle soiled linens so that they don't spread infectious materials and so that you're in accordance with disposal policy and local law.
8. Occupational health and bloodborne pathogens. Follow recommendations for preventing sharps injuries; avoiding potential injuries helps prevent resultant infections. Use alternatives to mouth-to-mouth resuscitation if such an action is needed.
9. Patient placement. An infectious patient should be in a private room. When moving a patient to another room, issue him barrier protection (such as a mask) to avoid his infecting staff and other patients he may come into contact with during the move, which should be as direct a route as possible.
Adjunct recommendations
Each of these recommendations is also category 1B.
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