Preventing Infections in a Hospital Environment

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The responsibility of preventing hospital acquired infections does not solely rest upon the feet of the nursing staff. The effort must be a team effort that includes all of the personnel at a facility.
During clinical rotations at Bartow Regional Hospital, Galen students noted on multiple occasions while rotating through the Emergency Department that the rooms were not cleaned by Environmental Services, but the nurses and/or technicians that work in the ER. The staff wiped down the beds and changed the sheets, so the rooms would be ready for the next round of patients who cycled through. Some of the Galen nursing students noted that when the cleaning staff would clean isolation rooms after the patient had been discharged that they would just wear gloves to clean the room, without a gown or other protective personal equipment. The students also observed staff taking medical equipment into the isolation rooms to take vital signs or blood glucose readings and the equipment as not being cleaned before being taken into the next patient’s room.
There is often a lot of emphasis placed on blood borne pathogens by the hospital and the staff in charge of employee education, but perhaps more needs to be said regarding surface and equipment contamination, cross contamination, and how to effectively remove contaminates from the hospital environment. Some of the most common pathogens found on hospital surfaces like MRSA, VRE, norovirus, and C. diff have certain properties that enable them to contaminate hospital surfaces and equipment. These include the ability to survive on a surface for long periods of time, ability to be transmitted by colonized hands, a low inoculated dose of the pathogen, and resistance to certain disinfectant...

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It is the role of all of the staff within a facility to keep it clean, disinfect, and reduce the number of pathogens that could possibly come into contact with a patient and cause a nosocomial infection. To do this effectively and consistently all the staff should be educated on disinfection guidelines, hospital policy, pathogens, and product information. A system to monitor the effectiveness of these interventions should also be in place. The Centers for Disease Control have created an environmental checklist to aid facilities in monitoring and evaluating room and surface cleaning within the facility (CDC, 2010). A checklist such as the CDC’s used in conjunction with Bartow Regional Hospitals cleaning products and information list should be utilized by environmental services and healthcare staff to act as a guide to aid in effective surface decontamination.

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