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Infection Control Program
Infection Control Program
§416.51
The ASC Infection Control Program must:
– Provide a functional and sanitary environment for
surgical services, to avoid sources and
transmission of infections and communicable
diseases;
– Be based on nationally recognized infection
control guidelines;
Infection Control Program (cont)
– Be directed by a designated healthcare
professional
– Be integrated into ASC’s QAPI program;
– Be ongoing
– Include actions to prevent, identify and manage
infections and communicable diseases, and
– Include mechanism to immediately implement
corrective actions and preventive measures to
improve the control of infection within the ASC.
Infection Control Program
§ 416.51
The ASC must maintain an explicit infection control
program
The program is responsible for providing a plan of
action for preventing, identifying, and managing
infections and communicable diseases.
– The plan of action must include mechanisms that result in
immediate action to take preventive or corrective measures
that improve the ASC infection control program.
Activities of Infection Control
Program
– Development and implementation of infection
control measures related to personnel
– Identifying infections
– Monitoring infection control program compliance
and plan evaluation
– Active surveillance
– Compliance with reportable disease
requirements of local health authorities
Minnesota Department of Health
Infectious Disease Epidemiology,
Prevention and Control
651-201-5414 or 1-877-676-5414
http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/idep
c/dtopics/reportable
Infection Control Guidelines
42 CFR 416.51
The infection control program must include
documentation that the ASC has considered,
selected, and implemented nationally
recognized infection control guidelines
Follow nationally recognized infection
control guidelines
Documentation that the ASC considered
and selected national-recognized infection
control guidelines for its program
Condition of Coverage-Infection
Control Program
Examples of national recognized
organizations include:
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC)
Associations for Professional in Infection Control
and Epidemermiology (APIC)
Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America
(SHEA)
Association of Peri-Operative Registered Nurses
Infection Control Program Designee
§42 CFR 416.51 (b) (1)
The ASC must designate in writing, a
qualified licensed health professional with
training, who will lead the facility’s infection
control program
Leadership must be on-site
−Consultant may be used
− On-site time not specified: must be
sufficient to ASC’s program size
System to Identify Infections
§ 416.51 (b) (3)
§ 416.44 (a) (3)
System to identify infections that may be
related to procedures performed at the ASC
– Follow up with primary care providers
– Physician performing the procedure obtains
information and reports to ASC
– Contact with patient following discharge
• Emails
• Phone call
ASC Personnel
§ 416.51 (b)
Infection Control training for staff
– Frequency
– Same categories
– Documentation of training
Evaluating ASC staff immunization status
Policies articulating when infected ASC staff
are restricted from direct patient care
Infection Control and Related
Practices
Hand Hygiene
Injection Practices
Single Use Devices
Point of Care Devices (e.g. blood glucose
monitors)
Sterilization
High–Level Disinfection
Hand Hygiene
§416.51 (a)
Staff perform hand hygiene:
– After removing gloves
– After direct patient care
– After contact with blood, body fluids or
contaminated surfaces (even if gloves are
worn).
Injection Practices
§416.48(a)
Needles are used for only one patient
Syringes are used for only one patient
Medication vials are always entered with a new
needle
Manufactured prefilled syringes are used for only
one patient
Multi-dose medications, used for more than one
patient, are not stored or accessed in the immediate
areas where direct patient care occurs
Injection Practices (cont)
Multi-dose medications used for more
than one patient are dated when
opened and discarded within 28 days
or according to manufactures
recommendations, whichever comes
first
Single Use Devices
§416.44(a)
Single use devices are reprocessed
– Approved by FDA for reprocessing
– Reprocessed by an FDA-approved
preprocessor.
Point of Care Devices
Manufacturer’s instructions indicate
more than one patient use
Device is cleaned and disinfected
before each use
Flash Sterilization
§416.51(a)
S&C Program Memo-09-55
Sterilization of unwrapped/uncontained
loads should not be routine practice in
ASCs but should be used for an urgent
and unpredicted need for a specific
device
High –Level Disinfection
High-level disinfection equipment should be
maintained according to manufacturer
instructions
Chemicals for high-level disinfection must
–
–
–
–
Be prepared appropriately
Be tested for appropriate concentration
Be replaced appropriately
Have documentation of preparation and
replacement
High-level Disinfection (cont)
Equipment subject to high-level
disinfection is:
– Disinfected for appropriate amount of time
– Disinfected at the correct temperature
– Allowed to air dry before use
– Stored in a designated clean area
Patient Admission Assessment and
Discharge
§416.52
The ASC must ensure each patient has
the appropriate pre-surgical and postsurgical assessments complete and
that all elements of the discharge
requirements are complete
Questions and Answers