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Quiz. 1. What is the most effective way to reduce the spread of microorganisms? 2. Why do you hold your hands lower than your elbows when rinsing? 3. Why do you have to rewash your hands if you touch the sink after washing? 4. When do you wash your hands? (4). 1. Handwashing
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Quiz • 1. What is the most effective way to reduce the spread of microorganisms? • 2. Why do you hold your hands lower than your elbows when rinsing? • 3. Why do you have to rewash your hands if you touch the sink after washing? • 4. When do you wash your hands? (4)
1. Handwashing • 2. prevents lather and water from running over arms and causing contamination • 3. touching a contaminated area re-contaminates your hands • 4. - before and after contact with a patient and their belongings - before and after eating - after using the bathroom - after handling any contaminated fluid or object
What is SEPSIS? • Potentially life threatening whole body infection, when the blood is overwhelmed by bacteria
Controlling Infection - Asepsis (Unit 2)
Asepsis • What is Asepsis? • Technique used to make the environment, the worker, and the patient as germ-free as possible • Why do we need Aseptic techniques? • Health care facilities are full of sick people and we do not want to get workers or other patients more sick because germs were passed around
Asepsis • Aseptic Techniques Prevent: • Cross infection • Re-infection • Self-inoculation • Passing illnesses from patient to healthcare worker and healthcare worker to patient
Asepsis • Aseptic Techniques Include: • Employees being clean and neat • Proper handling of all equipment • Using sterile procedures when necessary • Using proper cleaning solutions • Proper hand washing • Following Standard Precautions
Asepsis • Standard Precautions • guidlines designed to reduce the risk of transmission of microorganisms from recognized and unrecognized sources in the hospital
Asepsis • Standard Precautions • guidelines designed to reduce the risk of transmission of microorganisms from recognized and unrecognized sources in the hospital • established by OSHA
Asepsis • Standard Precautions • Mandated that all employees with a risk of exposure to body fluids are provided training and immunization within 10 days of hire. • Must be • Offered a hepatitis B vaccine (HBV) at no charge • Trained to use the appropriate protective equipment ro prevent exposure to body fluids • Receive an annual update and review
Asepsis • Standard Precautions • Provide protection from contact with blood, mucous membranes, non-intact skin, and all body fluids • Body fluids: • Blood • Pericardial fluid • Body fluids containing visible blood • Amniotic fluid • Tissue specimens • Cerebrospinal fluid • Semen • Vaginal Secretions • Interstitial Fluid • Pleural Fluid
Asepsis • Standard Precautions • Infection with HBV and HIV occur through: • Direct injection of infected blood or a contaminated needle that punctures the skin • Contact of infected body fluids with mucous membranes • Sexual contact • Pregnancy – transmitted from infected mother to baby
Asepsis • Controlling the Spread of Infection • Disinfection – using the proper cleaning solution to clean skin and equipment • Sterilization – process of killing microorganismsoff items that are put into the body or around an open wound with the use of autoclaves