Infection Control and Covid Safety
Infection Control and Covid Safety
Infection Control and Covid Safety
and
Covid Safety
Dr. Adeuga Adekuoye
Senior QA Lead for Reddington Multi-Specialist Hospital V/I
and
Reddington Zaine Laboratory
IPC TRAINING
What is IPC?
The practice of preventing or stopping the spread of infections during
healthcare delivery
– Hospitals, outpatient clinics, dialysis centers, long-term care facilities,
traditional practitioners
Precautions – 2
Ensure nasopharyngeal and other
samples are processed and reported
Laboratory and timeously
PLEASE NOTE
Currently staff giving direct
care are required to include
washing arms up to the
elbows.
Bare Below the Elbows….
Hand hygiene is the most important method of preventing the spread of infection.
All staff will need to comply with "BBTE" principles when providing direct clinical
care to patients or touching the immediate patient environment
Any staff who do not work in a clinical environment, but may need to enter the
patient environment as part of their role, will need to have the ability to be Bare
Below the Elbow and comply on these occasions.
Respiratory Hygiene
These are infection prevention measures designed to limit the transmission of respiratory
pathogens spread by droplet or airborne routes.
COVID-19: Transmission-Based Precautions
*WHO Infection prevention and control during healthcare when COVID-19 is suspected or confirmed
COVID-19: Transmission-Based Precautions
Use adequately ventilated single rooms (preferable) or dedicated
COVID-19 ward rooms with dedicated bathrooms
– Bathrooms should be cleaned and disinfected twice daily
Avoid transporting COVID-19 patients out of room unless
medically necessary
– Place a mask on COVID-19 suspected or confirmed patients if
transport out of a room is medically necessary
– Healthcare workers should wear appropriate PPE during transport*
Designate healthcare workers to care for patients with COVID-19
Restrict the number of visitors allowed
•Ensure staff have undertaken relevant training provided and are competent in performing
swabbing techniques
IPC TRAINING
COVID-19: Administrative Controls - 2
• Alcohol Hand Rub at each entrance and point of test
• Surfaces that can be cleaned and disinfected
• Car parking convenience to allow waiting in car for test appointment
(walk-in)
• In circumstances of mobility or distressed person, testing may be
completed in transport vehicle such persons arrive in
• Space to support physical distancing from other people
• Dedicated Testing Pod with sufficient space for 2 – 4 people (to
accommodate parent and child/carer)
IPC TRAINING
COVID-19: Administrative Controls - 3
• Hand wash sink within close proximity to testing pods
• Designated packaging area for samples to be organized for
transportation
• Dedicated waste holding area that can be secured
• Clean toilet facilities twice daily and check 4 times daily
• Designated area for any staff who becomes unwell to await transport
home if required
• Separate dining facilities with guidance on hand hygiene, mask use
and physical distancing observed
IPC TRAINING
Personal Protective
Equipment (PPE)
1 2 3 4 5
Human coronaviruses can To summarise, each area of the The cleaning can Environmental spraying of Body spraying of humans with
remain infectious on surfaces healthcare facility must be be validated using visual walls, floors, ceilings and any chemical or product in any
for up to 9 days. The SARS-CoV- cleaned at least twice daily, inspection and a record of passages in health care situation including entrances to
2 virus has been detected after with a proper schedule, cleaning must be kept. facilities with chlorine is not healthcare facilities, is not
up to 72 hours in experimental checklist and programme. In Following thorough cleaning, recommended. There is no warranted. The chemicals used
conditions. Therefore, cleaning high risk areas (COVID-19 surfaces are wiped (NOT evidence that transmission may be toxic to the skin, eyes
the environment is paramount triage, isolation ward and ICU SPRAYED) with disinfectants from these areas occurs. and respiratory tract and may
and detailed in the NCDC settings), the environment such as 1:1000 ppm chlorine or aggravate the acquisition of
covid-19 IPC Guidelines (2020). must be cleaned and 70% alcohol, as SARS-CoV 2.
disinfected at least 3-4 times recommended.
per day and checked by the
supervisor each time.
Biomedical Waste management
Segregation, Packing, Transportation and Storage
• Untreated bio-medical waste should not be mixed with other wastes
• Bio-medical waste shall be segregated into containers or bags at point
of generation (as per BMWM Rules 2016, amendment 2018 & 2019)
• Bio-medical waste containers or bags should be prominently labelled
with biohazard symbol (and other details as per Rules)
• Untreated bio-medical waste must not be stored >48 hrs
• Ensure no spillage occurs during handling and transit of bio-medical
waste
Biomedical Waste management
Conclusions
CONCLUSIONS - What to do to keep
yourself and others safe from COVID-19
• Maintain at least a 1-metre distance between yourself and others to
reduce your risk of infection when they cough, sneeze or speak.
Maintain an even greater distance between yourself and others when
indoors..
• Make wearing a mask a normal part of being around other people.
• The appropriate use, storage and cleaning or disposal are essential
to make masks as effective as possible.
CONCLUSIONS - How to make your
environment safer
• Avoid the 3Cs: spaces that are closed, crowded or involve close
contact.
• Outbreaks have been reported in restaurants, choir practices, fitness classes,
nightclubs, offices and places of worship where people have gathered, often
in crowded indoor settings where they talk loudly, shout, breathe heavily or
sing.
• The risks of getting COVID-19 are higher in crowded and inadequately
ventilated spaces where infected people spend long periods of time together
in close proximity. These environments are where the virus appears to spread
by respiratory droplets or aerosols more efficiently, so taking precautions is
even more important.
CONCLUSIONS - Don’t forget the basics of good hygiene
IPC TRAINING
References.....
• World Health Organization. Director-General's remarks at the media briefing on 2019-nCoV on 11
February 2020. http://www.who.int/dg/speeches/detail/who-director-general-s-remarks-at-the-
media-briefing-on-2019-ncov-on-11-february-2020 (Accessed on February 12, 2020).
• Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2019 Novel coronavirus, Wuhan, China. Information
for Healthcare Professionals. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/hcp/index.html (Ac-
cessed on February 14, 2020).
• World Health Organization. Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) technical guidance. https://
www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus-2019/technical-guidance (Accessed on
February 14, 2020).
• Gorbalenya AE, Baker SC, Baric RS, et al. Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus:
The species and its viruses – a statement of the Coronavirus Study Group. bioRxiv 2020. https://
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.02.07.937862v1 (Accessed on February 12, 2020).
• Zhu N, Zhang D, Wang W, et al. A Novel Coronavirus from Patients with Pneumonia in China, 2019
.N
Engl J Med 2020; 382:727.