Q&A: How Navajo Nation Dealt With COVID-19
September 11th 2020Jonathan Iralu, MD: “We’ve dealt with small outbreaks, not a pandemic, but we were, in a sense, prepped to deal with the pandemic because we have had experience working with outbreaks…. We were used to collaborating with the state and the tribe on these other conditions. For COVID-19, we didn’t have to reinvent the wheel….”
Viewpoint: Infection Preventionist Guide to Dealing with COVID Misinformation
September 8th 2020It is imperative that infection preventionists engage and combat this messaging on social media and wherever it occurs. To not do so, allows misinformation to fan the pandemic, placing all of our lives at risk.
Is COVID-19 Primarily a Heart and Vascular Disease?
September 8th 2020Infection preventionists need to be able to articulate to those who feel that the young are safe just because their fatality rate is extremely low, that even in this age group there are major concerns regarding long-term consequences of this virus.
Q&A: IPs Need to Get More Involved in Endoscope Disinfection
September 3rd 2020Melinda Benedict, MS, CIC, CFER: “I think for infection preventionists: If you’re not already involved in your endoscopy department or you haven’t been invited in, see if you can get in and just continue to check it out and see what’s going on, especially if the reprocessing and cleaning of the scope is actually done within that clinic.”
Private Industry May Call on Infection Preventionists for Help
September 2nd 2020Anthony Harris, MD, MBA, MPH: “Really now it’s all about testing. How do we test? What scale do we test with? And, you know, what are the steps toward getting that access to the testing levels that we need necessary to mitigate risk?”
Infection Preventionists Need to Monitor PPE Use
August 27th 2020Sharon Ward-Fore, MS, MT(ASCP), CIC: “Practices drift. You can become complacent and maybe your level of awareness has decreased…. So, infection preventionists need to be really aware of what’s happening in the areas they cover as far as PPE usage is concerned.”
Infection Preventionist Guide for Dealing With Flu and COVID-19
August 26th 2020If you see something, say something. Let coworkers know when they may have breached infection control practices such as forgetting to wash their hands, not wearing PPE properly, or missed opportunities to clean a high-touch surfaces.
Beautiful Friendship: How IPs, EVS Work Best Together
August 25th 2020Sharon Ward-Fore, MS, MT(ASCP), CIC: “Although EVS is in charge of the cleaning process infection preventionists work carefully with them to make sure the process is followed by auditing it frequently. And both sides provide feedback to each other just to make sure everything follows best practices.”
What Hospitals Can Learn from Return-to-School Failures
August 24th 2020Knowing the needs of patients, how can we safely allow visitors again? When will universal masking not be required? A piece to this is that there is no hard rule. These are conversations that require considerable collaboration and plans to scale up and scale down.
Q&A: Flu Data Show Potency of Anti-COVID Tactics Like Masking, Hand Hygiene
August 19th 2020Kevin Kavanagh, MD: “Getting this message out is something which we need to do. Infection preventionists can be very, very much instrumental in getting out the correct message and counteracting the false messaging, which we are hearing on both social media and also, unfortunately, from our elected officials.”
Q&A: Getting Healthcare Workers to Wear Masks
August 19th 2020Linda Spaulding: “We [infection preventionists] have listening sessions with staff and we talked to them about proper mask wearing 24/7. We can do a listening session and we still have people sitting there with a mask under their nose, while we’re telling them not to. You have to continuously stress this among healthcare workers, be it whatever department.”
The 2020 Flu: Dud or Devastation, It is Up To You
August 18th 2020This year we have to do more than just rely on the flu vaccine. Avoiding the flu plus COVID-19 catastrophe is contingent on the US widely embracing public health guidance of wearing masks, meticulous hand hygiene and social distancing.
Neck Gaiters for COVID-19 Worse Than No Face Covering At All
August 17th 2020Neck gaiters weren’t the only face coverings tested: in all 14 were analyzed, from N95s (unsurprisingly judged to be the most effective in containing COVID-19 spread) to bandanas (not much more effective then neck gaiters, according to the study).
Q&A: Lessons From the COVID Frontlines … of New Zealand
August 17th 2020Dalilah Restrepo, MD: “I think now infection preventionists should be part of a school board, should be part of any executive board, of any corporate area, because there is no way that you can expect this expertise to just come about for other folks that aren’t trained in infection prevention.”
Q&A: ‘We’ve Never Been Here Before’ … Flu on Top of COVID
August 13th 2020Linda Spaulding, RN, BC, CIC, CHEC, CHOP: “Infection control people really have to monitor closely all respiratory viruses that are out there and be sure that you’re working actively with management to help put in place whatever needs to be put in place.”
Best N95 Training: Watch, Learn, Then Do While Being Watched
August 13th 2020Film healthcare workers as they don and doff N95s, show that video to participants (explaining where they got it right, and where they got it wrong), and then have the participants don and doff again with more input from trainers.
Q&A: How COVID-19 Tests Hospital Command Centers
August 12th 2020Mary Ellen Beliveau: “If I’m an OB/GYN and all of a sudden I’m in the ICU, I don’t know how to run a ventilator. I’ve never run a ventilator before. I could be the best OB/GYN in the country. But suddenly, being put in a different area of practice and then to be expected to be at the top of my license is almost impossible.”
Cleaning COVID-Tainted Hospital Rooms: Proceed With Contact Precaution
August 11th 2020Investigators found SARS-CoV-2 "on various hospital objects, and these surfaces can be sources of nosocomial transmission via direct contact. Therefore, our findings provide an important basis for justification of strict contact precaution.”