Elements of dialysis care that may promote the spread. Applying lessons from the patient safety movement to

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Infection Control Review in the Core Survey Partnering to Protect Dialysis Patients from Healthcare Associated Infections 1

Objectives : to discuss Elements of dialysis care that may promote the spread of infections Applying lessons from the patient safety movement to infection control the the use of checklists How the Core Survey puts direct care staff and surveyors on the same page to protect t dialysis i patients from infections 2

Healthcare Associated Infections in Dialysis We re Losing a Lot of Patients! 3

Infections: A Major Patient Safety Problem in Dialysis 2 nd Leading Cause Of Death UM KECC, 2009 Approximately 15,000 dialysis patients die annually due to infections 4

Many Dialysis i Patient Infections Are Healthcare Associated Infections (HAI) Acquired as a result of care provided or from an environmental source at the dialysis facility Starts with the presence of an infectious agent Spread to patients Are largely yp preventable! 5

Why Is Infection Prevention Such a Challenge in Dialysis? The in center hemodialysis patient treatment reality: Staff caring for multiple patients w/short changeover times Lots of potential blood exposure immunosuppressed dialysis patients No physical separation of individual treatment stations High risk for spread of bloodborne and other pathogens compounded by 6

Recent Studies Illustrate How the Dialysis Facility Can Become a Box of Bugs Organisms remain viable on surfaces for prolonged periods Hepatitis B >1 week Influenza 1 2 days MRSA 7 days to 7 months VRE 5 days to 4 months C. difficile il spore 5 months Kramer A, Schwebke I, Kampf G. BMC Infect Dis 6:130, 2006 Healthcare workers touch as many as 7 surfaces after touching a contaminated one! McLaughlin AC, Walsh F. Am J Infect Control 39(6):456 463, 2011 7

How Are Infections Spread in Dialysis? Five main sources of pathogen transmission: 1. On the hands of staff going between patients & between common areas and patients t 2. From ineffectively disinfected equipment & environmental surfaces 3. From contaminated supplies & medications 4. From inadequate vascular access care 5. From virulent ue tpat pathogens (e.g. hepatitis epatts B) 8

How Can Direct Care Staff Protect Patients t from Infections??? Photos courtesy of Diana Shelkov 9

Dialysis Patient Infections Can Be Prevented by: Following good infection prevention and control practices The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has guidelines for these practices in dialysis facilities 10

The CDC Guidelines Address general practices (wash hands, clean & disinfect equipment, etc.) Do not include details for application of the guidelines (what parts of the equipment need to be disinfected, etc.) Remember the lesson from the Patient Safety Movement Staff need clear directions in what is expected of them in their duties 11

The Use of Procedural Checklists Has Improved Patient t Safety in Hospitals Checklists are used by high reliability organizations such as aviation and nuclear energy to improve safety Hospitals now use them routinely and have shown significant reduction in HAI and HAC with them Gives staff clear directions on what is expected Checklists for dialysis procedures may reduce the chances for spreading infections by giving ii clear direction on how to apply the CDC guidelines to daily practice 12

Development and Evolution of Dialysis i Infection Control Checklists Began with a collaborative group: CMS, CDC, ESRD Nt Networks, researchers, dialysis i staff (NOTICE) Identified dialysis activities with highest infection risk (vascular access care, disinfection i of equipment, etc.) Developed step by step procedures hand hygiene and glove changes are included d as steps Tested in 34 dialysis facilities in 4 Networks Audit versions of these checklists are used by surveyors to observe ICHD patient care in the Core Survey 13

Review of Infection Control in the Core Survey Covers many survey activities one of the main focuses of the Core Survey Environmental flash tour Looking for observable concerns (blood splatters, patient t stations ti too close together, etc.) Observations of HD Care & Infection Control Surveyors will observe you caring for patients, using the audit checklists Surveyors will review isolation i practices may ask you about usual practices for staff assignments in isolation QAPI has a section of review dedicated to infection control Includes staff education and visual auditing 14

Infection Control Checklists for Dialysis Initiation of Dialysis with CVC CVC Exit Site Care Discontinuation of Dialysis and Post Care of CVC Initiation of Dialysis with AVF/G Discontinuation of Dialysis and Post Care of AVF/G Parenteral Medication Preparation/Administration i i t Cleaning & Disinfection of the Dialysis Station Supply Management & Contamination Prevention 15

Checklists for Central Venous Catheter Access and Care Masks on staff and patient Clean field under CVC ports/line connections Hubs (ports) of CVC disinfected before and after treatment External OR open port or both Exit site care/dressing change: No common supply tray/cart taken to the station Glove change/hh b/t old dressing and cleaning Cleanse exit site; sterile dressing applied Glove change/hh b/t discontinuation of tx. and post tx. CVC care 16

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Testing in 34 Facilities Showed: Initiation, Discontinuation with a CVC and CVC Exit Site Care 45% disinfected the hubs prior to initiation, and 29% did it on discontinuation of dialysis 53% changed gloves and hand hygiene after reinfusion i and before post treatment t t CVC care 35% changed gloves and hand hygiene after removing old CVC dressing and before cleansing the exit site

Checklists for AV Fistula/Graft Access and Care Pre dialysis access care and initiation of dialysis: Skin over access washed/cleaned (by patient or staff ) Locate/palpate access before skin antisepsis No touching sites after this without repeat antisepsis Skin antisepsis per manufacturer DFU Post dialysis care: Glove change/hh b/t discontinuation of tx. and needle removal Needles sites held with gloves or disinfected i d clamps, soiled dressings replaced Patients/visitors holding sites do HH prior to touching other items/surfaces (e.g., scales, doorknobs) and leaving 21

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Testing in 34 Facilities Showed: Initiation and Discontinuation of Dialysis with AV Fistula or Graft 53% washed skin over the access prior to skin antisepsis i 49% touched the skin over selected cannulation site after skin antisepsis 49% changed gloves, HH after reinfusion 49% changed gloves, HH after reinfusion and needle removal

Checklist for Cleaning & Disinfection of the Dialysis Station No supplies for next patient brought before disinfection Cannot store next patient s supplies within splash zone All equipment & surfaces wiped wet with EPA-registered hospital disinfectant-prepared accurately Machine: bloodlines, dialyzer removed; Surfaces (top, front, sides),dialysate hoses/hansens Pi Prime waste receptacle all surfaces Exterior of portable dialysate jugs 25

Checklist for Cleaning & Disinfection of the Dialysis Station (cont.) Chair: vacated, fully reclined Fresh disinfectant wipe/cloth used All front-facing surfaces wiped, including surfaces along sides of seat cushion & side tables Non-disposable items wiped: BP cuff, TV controls, etc. Disposable items discarded or dedicated to that patient Note: It is not required that the patient has vacated the dialysis station before disinfection and preparation of the machine can be conducted. If the patient remains in the chair during disinfection, strictly adhere to separation b/t the patient and the disinfected/prepared machine. 26

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Testing in 34 Facilities Showed: Cleaning and Disinfection of the Dialysis Station 44% adequately disinfected the machine surfaces (including dialysate hoses) 31% adequately disinfected i d the prime receptacle 32% disinfected non disposable items

Checklist for Supply Management & Contamination ti Prevention More general with some overlapping with the other checklists Not pertaining to a single dialysis activity Supplies stored away from potential contamination Sufficient distance from dialysis stations No next patient supplies brought to station until that equipment/surface has been disinfected (e.g. machine) Non-disposable equipment brought to dialysis station disinfected (e.g. ph/cond meter) 29

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Testing in 34 Facilities Showed: Dialysis Supply Management and Contamination Prevention 51% kept supplies in designated clean areas sufficient distance from dialysis stations to prevent possible contamination 19% disinfected i d non disposable items taken to the dialysis station (e.g. ph/cond meter, digital thermometer)

Checklist for Parenteral Medication Preparation and Administration Meds prepared in clean area, away from stations Exception: saline drawn from patient s own bag Aseptic technique=clean hands, disinfect vial stoppers Single dose vials for one patient (applies to saline bags) Multiple dose vials entered with only empty sterile syringe - no pooling Administer meds to one patient at a time No med carts, no other patients meds taken to station PPE, disinfect injection port before injection 32

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Testing in 34 Facilities Showed: IV Medication Preparation and Administration 68% re punctured multidose vials with only new sterile syringe/needle and discarded opened m/d vials w/in 28 days 29% took more than one patient s meds to the dialysis station at a time

The Infection Control Checklists Don t Address Everything on How to Protect Patients t from HAI 35

Hand Hygiene and Glove Use in Dialysis 36

Hand Hygiene and The World Health Organization (WHO) Campaign My 5 moments for hand hygiene Before touching a patient Before clean/aseptic procedures After body fluid exposure/risk After touching a patient After touching a patient s surroundings Adequate hand hygiene is: Apply alcohol based hand rub to cover all hand surfaces, rub to dry OR Wet hands, apply soap to cover all surfaces, rinse process to take 40 60 seconds 37

WHO Hand Hygiene for Dialysis CDC says that GLOVES must be: Worn when there is potential for exposure eg e.g. inserting needles, accessing CVC, touching equipment at dialysis station ( splash zone ) Changed b/t patients and dialysis stations Changed b/t dirty and clean with the same patient e.g. removing old CVC dressing, applying new one; discontinuation of dialysis and vascular access care 38

Isolation Practices 39

Isolation Practices Protecting the HBV susceptible patients when there is at least one HBV+ patient on census Isolation room/area used only by HBV+ patient(s) Area separated from other stations=width ti idth of 1 station ti Supplies/equipment dedicated to isolation Staff assigned to isolation do not deliver care to susceptible patients while the HBV+ patient is in isolation room/area review assignments & interview Exceptions are in emergencies & 1 RN on duty for CVC access and/or meds All PPE removed and HH when leaving isolation i 40

YOU are the key to Protecting Your Patients from HAI! Celebrate what YOU do! 41