Infection Prevention And Control Flashcards

1
Q

What does HCAIs stand for and what are they

A

Healthcare associated infection
Any infection as a result of accessing healthcare
Healthcare could include acute hospital, rehab centre, nursing or residential facilities
Staff and visitors as well

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2
Q

How common are HCAI

A

Estimates 10%

Risks vary according to kind of setting ITU, elderly, neonate patient

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3
Q

What types of infection

A

Pneumonia, UTI, surgical site infection, gastroenteritis, bloodstream infection.
Sources endogenous from patients own flora or exogenous from other patients, staff or the environment

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4
Q

Are they preventable

A

~15% are
Exogenous more so
Predominantly device associated- catheter, IV, central line

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5
Q

Why is there more of a problem with HCAIs now

A

More vulnerable patients - older, more high tech treatment

Use of antibiotics, inc resistance and running out of them

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6
Q

What is antibiotic resistance

A

The ability of bacteria to become resistant to antibiotics which may be used fro the treatment of infections
Bacteria learn to make enzymes to the antibiotic and stop it from working
Also stop the antibiotic from getting into the bacteria

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7
Q

Why is antibiotic resistance a problem now

A
Small world 
Overuse of antibiotic 
Resistance always emerging 
Patient expectations
Media
Internet 
Highlight the increasing HCAIs more
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8
Q

Where is the code of practice now to control HCAIs

A

Health and social care act 2008
Code of practice hoe to manage HCAIs
Prosecution if you fail to follow it

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9
Q

Typical infection prevention arrangements for NHS organisations

A
Director of infections and prevention control - report to trust board
Medical microbiologists 
Infection prevention nurses 
Antimicrobial pharmacists 
Decontamination specialist 
They monitor quality and safety -CQC
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10
Q

What is MRSA

A

Methicillin resistant staph aureus
Mainly associated with healthcare
Strains carrying the PVL toxins are becoming problematic, and more associated with community transmission

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11
Q

Types of resistance

A

Clonal - spreads via cross infection
Most HCAIs in U.K. Due to 2 strains, EMRSa 15 and 16
Related to additional penicillins binding protein in the cell wall
Implies resistance to all beta lactams
Association with multiple resistance

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12
Q

Management of MRSA

A

Difficult
Limited no of antimicrobials
Glycopeptides - vancomycin (poor tissue penetration, monitoring of levels, slow infusion)
Teicoplanin - difficulty in dosing, role of monitoring and cost
Fusidic acid
Linezolid
Daptomycin

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13
Q

National strategies to reduce MRSA infection

A

Search and destroy

Target for reductions in infection and a zero tolerance approach to avoidable infection

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14
Q

Measures to reduce MRSA

A
Screening 
Decolonisation treatment 
Appropriate treatment of colonised patient 
Care with peripheral and central lines 
Prevention of pressure sores and ulcers
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15
Q

What we c diff

A

Anaerobic Gram pos bacilli
Spore forming - results in ability to withstand disinfection, drying, adverse conditions
Note relatively resistant to effects of alcohol and other frequent,y used disinfection
Commonest cause of healthcare associated diarrhoea

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16
Q

Risk factors

A
Age 
Antibiotics 
PPI 
Cross infection via poor hand hygiene or contaminated environment 
Previous CDI
17
Q

C diff epidemiology

A

Widespread in the environment and young mammals
Most clinical cases linked to healthcare environments
Recently shown to be found in food, including human strains

18
Q

Diagnosis and management

A

Think about c diff as a diagnosis
Always send a sample if any chance of a case - esp elderly or recently hospitalised
Avoid loperamide or any other anyimotilith agents they may allow the toxin to pool and predispose to toxic megacolon
Try to stop systemic abtiobiotcs
Specific c diff treatment
Metronidazole, oral vancomycin, fidaxomicin, faecal donor infusion

19
Q

Prevention of C diff

A

Isolation of case
Hand washing
Cleaning of the environment
Antibiotic stewardship

20
Q

What are enterobacteriaceae

A

Family of organisms which live in the GI tract of man an dotter animals somis widespread in the environment
E.g. E. coli, klebsiella, enterobacteriaceae
Common causes of human infection - urinary tract, abdominal, bloodstream
Beta -lactam antiobiotic have been the mainstay of treatment

21
Q

What are ESBLs

A

Extended spectrum beta lactamases
Bacteria with emzymes which break down broad spectrum cephalosporins such as cefuroxime, gentamicin, trimethoprim
AI stay if treatment are carbapenems such as meropenem, imipenem

22
Q

Carbapenemase producers

A

Initially limited to a few countries - NDM in Indian sub continent, KPC in Greece and Middle East but now widespread
Difficult to detect in lab
Final confirmation by OCR to detect type of carbapenemase

23
Q

What are these strains susceptible to

A

Currently majority of isolates susceptible to tigecycline and colistin only
Tigecycline - new tetracycline derivative, IV form only, not licensed for UTI or bloodstream levels because of poor levels
Colistin old antibiotics for last resort for the resistant strains , renal toxicity 20% , IV for UTI/bacteraemia

24
Q

Colistin resistance on China

A

Used in agriculture high amounts so tributes to resistance in animals

25
Q

National guidance for the prevention of CPEs

A

Risk assessment of new admissions
Focus on prevention he’s,theses inhigh risk countries and areas
Isolation and screening of cases