Medical and Surgical Asepsis - Faculty Sites
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Transcript Medical and Surgical Asepsis - Faculty Sites
Metropolitan Community College
NURS 1510
Nancy Pares, RN, MSN
Asepsis…
◦ .absence of germs or micro organisms
Medical asepsis….
◦ technique or procedure which reduces the number
of micro organisms and thus prevents the spread of
disease
Surgical asepsis….
◦ Protection against infection before, during and after
a surgical procedure.
Infection
◦ Invasion of the body by pathogens
Bacteria
◦ One celled, multiply rapidly, classified by shape and
how they cluster together
Virus
◦ Smallest of all pathogens; replication within the
host
Fungi
◦ Organisms that exist by feeding on organic matter
Protozoa
◦ Single celled organism; spread by feces,
Rickettsia
◦ Organisms multiply in animal hosts and transmit to
humans through bites
Helminths
◦ Parasitic worms found in soil; transmitted via hand
to mouth
Mycoplasmas
◦ No cell wall; multi shaped
Chemical agents
◦ Pesticides, food additives, medications, industrial
Physical agents
◦ Heat, noise, radiation, and machines
Moisture
Organic matter
Warmth
Darkness
Oxygen
Alkaline ph
Infectious agents
Pathogens
Normal flora that become pathogenic
Reservoir
Where pathogens live and multiply
May be living
• Humans, animals, insects
• May be nonliving
Food, floors, equipment, contaminated water
Portal of Exit:
Mode of Transmission:
Via
• Bodily fluids
• Coughing, sneezing,
diarrhea
• Seeping wounds
• Tubes, IV lines
Contact
• Direct – touching,
kissing, sexual contact
• Indirect – contact with a
fomite
Droplet: Cough, sneeze
Airborne: Via air
conditioning, sweeping
Portal of Entry:
Eye, nares, mouth,
vagina, cuts, scrapes
Wounds, surgical sites,
IV or drainage tube
sites
Bite from a vector
Susceptible Host:
Person with inadequate
defense
Three determining
factors:
• Virulence
• Number of organisms
• Host’s defenses
Incubation: From time of infection until
manifestation of symptoms; can infect others
Prodromal: Appearance of vague symptoms;
not all diseases have this stage
Illness: Signs and symptoms present
Decline: Number of pathogens decline
Convalescence: Tissue repair, return to health
By Location:
Local
• Occurs in a limited region in the body (e.g.,
urinary tract infection)
Systemic
• Spread via blood or lymph
• Affects many regions (e.g., septicemia)
Acute - Rapid onset of short duration
e.g., Common cold
Chronic - Slow development, long duration
e.g., Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, osteomyelitis
Latent - Infection present with no discernible
symptoms
e.g., HIV/AIDS
Presence of pathogen
Reservoir (source)
◦ Pathogen survive and multiply
Portal of exit from reservoir
◦ Direct, indirect, airborne
Mode of transmission
Portal of entry to host
Susceptible host
Local
◦ Limited to a defined area; resembles inflammation
◦ Ex: redness, warmth, tenderness, swelling
Systemic
◦ Affects the entire body and may involve multiple
organs, goes through the stages of infection
◦ Ex: fever, anorexia, n/v, lymph node swelling
Vascular
◦ Aterioles dilate, blood and WBC go to area
◦ s/s= redness and warmth
Inflammation
◦ Tissue dies causing release of chemicals (histamine
and prostaglandins) which allow blood vessel
permeability. Cells, proteins, fluids enter the
tissue spaces blocking lymphatics to create a ‘wall’
against infection
Phagocytosis
◦ WBC enter the tissues causing release of pyrogens
(fever); exudates form discharge; healing occurs
An infection acquired in a health-care facility
Cost to the health-care system = $4.5 billion/year
Leading cause of death
Preventable with use of aseptic principles/
techniques
Exogenous Nosocomial Infection: Pathogen
acquired from health-care environment
Endogenous Nosocomial Infection: Normal flora
multiply and cause infection as a result of
treatment
•
Iatrogenic
▫ Infection from a procedure
ex: UTI from foley insertion
•
exogenous
▫ Infection from non-normal flora
ex: clostridium
•
Endogenous
▫ Infection when normal flora altered
ex: yeast infection
UTI
◦ Insertion, contamination of drainage system,
improper cleansing
Surgical site
◦ Improper technique for handwashing or dressing
change
URI
◦ Improper handwashing or suctioning technique
IV
◦ Improper handwashing or site care
Extended LOS in hospital
Multiple care givers
Antibiotic choices and over use
Improper medical or surgical asepsis
Age
◦ Very young and very old
Poor nutritional status
Smoker, ETOH use
Existing co-morbid conditions
Chronic illnesses, chemo,radiation
Clients with invasive procedures
Clients with prolonged stress
•
Containing nosocomial infections
CLEAN, DISINFECT, STERILIZE
•
Controlling/eliminating reservoirs
▫ Bathing, dressing changes, patent drainage
systems
•
Controlling the portal of exit
▫ Cover mouth/nose, wear mask, client teaching
•
Controlling transmission
▫ Do not share equipment, proper handling of linens,
HANDWASHING
•
Controlling portal of entry
▫ Maintain skin integrity, position changes, proper
wiping techniques, maintain drainage integrity
Protecting susceptible host
◦ Protect natural defenses-skin, mucous membranes,
fluid intake
◦ Encourage cough and deep breathing
◦ Change position
◦ Oral hygiene
◦ Promote rest and sleep
◦ Reduce client stress
Primary Defenses:
Anatomical features, limit pathogen entry
• Intact skin
• Mucous membranes
• Tears
• Normal flora in GI tract
• Normal flora in urinary tract
Secondary Defenses:
Biochemical processes activated by chemicals
released by pathogens
• Phagocytosis
• Complement cascade
• Inflammation
• Fever
Tertiary Defenses:
Humoral immunity
• B-cell production of antibodies in response to an
antigen
Cell-mediated immunity
• Direct destruction of infected cells by T cells
Developmental stage
Breaks in the skin
Illness/injury, chronic disease
Smoking, substance abuse
Multiple sex partners
Medications that inhibit/decrease immune
response
Nursing/medical procedures
Adequate nutrition
Balanced hygiene
• To manufacture cells of the immune system
• Sufficient to decrease skin bacterial count
• Not overzealous; causes skin cracking
Rest/exercise
Reducing stress
Immunization
Medical asepsis:
“A state of cleanliness that decreases the
potential for the spread of infections”
Promoted through:
• Maintaining a clean environment
• Maintaining clean hands
• Following Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
guidelines
Clean spills and dirty surfaces promptly
Remove pathogens through chemical means
(disinfect)
Remove clutter
Consider supplies brought to the client room
as contaminated
Consider items from the client’s home as
contaminated
When you arrive in the unit
When you leave the unit
Before and after restroom use
Before and after client contact
Before and after contact with client belongings
Before gloving
After glove removal
Before and after touching your face
Before and after eating
After touching a contaminated article
When you see visible dirt on your hands
Wash for at least 15 seconds in nonsurgical
setting; 2-6 minutes in surgical setting
Use warm water, not hot
Apply soap to wet hands
Use friction
Clean beneath fingernails and jewelry
Rinse soap
Towel or hand dry
Standard precautions (universal precautions)
Protects health-care workers from exposure
Decreases transmission of pathogens
Protects clients from pathogens carried by
health-care workers
Contact Precautions:
Pathogen is spread by direct contact
Sources of infection - draining wounds, secretions,
supplies
Precautions include:
• Possible private room
• Clean gown and glove use
• Disposal of contaminated items in room
• Double-bag linen and mark
Droplet Precautions:
Pathogen is spread via moist droplets:
Coughing, sneezing, touching contaminated objects
Precautions include:
• Same as those for contact
• Addition of mask and eye protection within 3 ft of
client
Airborne Precautions:
Pathogen is spread via air currents
Transmission via ventilation systems, shaking
sheets, sweeping
Precautions include:
• Same as those for contact, with addition of special
mask
“Reverse” isolation:
Protects the client from organisms
Used with immune-compromised client
population
Precautions include:
• Private room likely
• Nurse not assigned to clients with active infection
• Mask, handwashing, clean/sterile gown, gloves
• No reuse of gowns, gloves
Includes:
Creation of a sterile environment
Use of sterile equipment/supplies
Sterilization of reusable supplies
Surgical hand scrub
Surgical attire
Sterile gloves
Sterile field
Use of sterile technique
Protective barriers
Change gloves
HANDWASHING
Discard sharps correctly
Double bag
Cover breaks in the skin
Organs most vital to a functional immune
system
◦
◦
◦
◦
Liver…produces immunoglobulins (antibodies)
Lymph nodes…produce and circulate lymphocytes
Bone marrow and thymus..form immune sys. Cells
Spleen…removes dead cells and foreign molecules
Humoral
◦ Attack bacteria and virus’ at the extracellular level
◦ B cell lymphocytes cause synthesis of antibodies
leading to destruction of antigens and creation of
antibodies that subsequently protect from the same
antigen
◦ Five classes of antibodies
IgG, IgM, IgA, IgE, and IgD. IgG is most abundant and
crosses the placenta provides passive immunity for
newborns.
Cell mediated immunity
◦ Fights pathogens inside the cell
◦ T cells (a form of WBC) binds with the antigen,
becomes sensitized and releases lymphokines
which attract macrophages that destroy the antigen
◦ Three types of T cells
Cytotoxic, helper T and suppressor T
•
Natural
•
Passive
•
Active
•
Acquired
•
Artificial
▫ Present at birth, genetically determined
▫ Acquired through introduction of antibodies, ie
mother passes to infant
▫ Antibodies develop within the body to neutralize or
destroy an infective agent
▫ Exposure to an antigen or passive injection of
immunoglobulin
▫ Produced by vaccination
Medical asepsis
◦ Practice which reduces the number, growth and
spread of micro organisms
◦ Referred to as ‘clean’ technique’
◦ Handwashing 2 min-15 sec
Surgical asepsis
◦ Total elimination of all micro organisms, spores
◦ Sterile field (OR, L&D, etc), gown and glove
◦ Methods:
Steam, radiation, chemicals, or gas
Apply to :
◦
◦
◦
◦
All body fluids, secretions (except perspiration)
Blood
Non intact skin
Mucous membranes
Gloves worn:
◦ To provide a protective barrier
◦ To reduce opportunities for ‘nurse’ organism
transfer to client
◦ WEARING GLOVES DOES NOT REPLACE
HANDWASHING!!!
The
single most important
measure to reduce the risk of
transmission!
Nurses do hands on work, so
always wash first!
Cover your nose and mouth with your elbow.
Use tissues to contain respiratory secretions
and dispose into the nearest waste container
after use.
Perform hand hygiene after contact with any
contaminated materials/objects
Turn on slow, steady stream of warm water
Moisten hands with water, then apply soap
Rub hands together vigorously for at least 15
seconds
Rinse under water
Use a clean paper towel or air dryer to dry
hands
May use when hands are not visibly soiled
Apply adequate amount to palm of one hand
Rub hands together, covering all surfaces of
hands and fingers (including under the nails)
until hands are dry
Do not rinse with water
May be used 5-10 times before washing with
soap and water is required.
Admitting calls to tell you that they have a
client who previously cultured positive for
MRSA in their urine. What precaution do you
place this client in?
What if the MRSA was positive in the sputum?
You have a client that has very runny stools.
The doctor orders a stool culture.
What additional information can you supply
the lab?
What precautions would you place this patient
in?
Client presents to ED with high fever,
headache, body aches and non-productive
cough. Client states the her husband just
returned from a business trip in China.
First thought?
Precautions?