Rationale for Dental Infection Control, Artykuły z zakresu dezynfekcji, Nowe znalezione artykuły
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//-->Ra#onale for Dental Infec#on Control Dr. Raghunath Pu5aiah, Texas A&M University A Webber Training Teleclass ObjecIves -‐ Provide a raIonale for the pracIce of dental infecIon control. DR. RAGHUNATH PUTTAIAH, BDS, MPH WWW.OSHA4DENTAL.COM PLANO, TEXAS Hosted by Jim Gauthier Providence Care Kingston, Ontario www.webbertraining.com March 7, 2013 -‐ Address past & recent history of infecIon control, routes of disease transmission, raIonal applicaIon of universal/standard/addiIonal precauIons, biases towards care of infecIous paIents, common levels of decontaminaIon and finally pracIcal applicaIon of Spaulding's ClassificaIon. Components of Dental Safety Historical Impact of Infec#ous Diseases Dental Safety 2. Francisco Pizzaro 3. Cortez and Montezuma in Tenoch#tlan 1. By Hombre D Hojalata (Own work) [CC-‐BY-‐SA-‐3.0-‐es (h[p://creaIvecommons.org/licenses/by-‐sa/3.0/es/deed.en)], via Wikimedia Commons 2. By Hombre D Hojalata (Own work) [CC-‐BY-‐SA-‐3.0-‐es (h[p://creaIvecommons.org/licenses/by-‐sa/3.0/es/deed.en)], via Wikimedia Commons 3. By Unknown; published by en:Kurz and Allison [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons Why are we doing all this? Wikipedia Wikimedia Pioneers in Infection ControlWikimedia Sushrutha Ignaz Semmelweiss Joseph Lister • hildbed fever caused by Cphysicians & medical students • ashing hands reduced rates Wfrom 18% to <2% • indings not accepted by peers F• sing carbolic acid reduced Unosocomial infec#ons in the Glasgow General Hospital • indings well accepted F• onsidered the father of surgery C• 00-‐800BC 4• rote a trea#se on surgery W• sed fumiga#on techniques U• lip nails and hair, clean and flame Csurgical instruments 1. Benedek, István (1983) Ignaz Phillip Semmelweis 1818-‐1865, Gyomaendrőd, Hungary: Corvina Kiadó ISBN: 9631314596. plate 15 2. Joseph Lister source: h[p://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/misc/evprev/fig23.jpg Hosted by Jim Gauthier, Providence Care, Kingston, Ontario www.webbertraining.com 1 Ra#onale for Dental Infec#on Control Dr. Raghunath Pu5aiah, Texas A&M University A Webber Training Teleclass History of Dental InfecIon Control • Developed during the 1960s due to HepaIIs B InfecIons • Only developed momentum aker the HIV Pandemic in the mid-‐1980s -‐Den#stry is predominantly a surgical field -‐Great poten#al for disease transmission DefiniIon & RaIonale DefiniIon: – ontrol of iatrogenic, nosocomial and Ccross-‐infecIon in a dental office including control of occupaIonal exposures to diseases during dental paIent care – aker 6 paIents infected with HIV by Florida DenIst – RecommendaIons, regulaIons on standards of care & safety in the US and Europe by Federal Regulatory Agencies Control vs. PrevenIon: – ontrol does not mean prevenIon, it Cis reducIon in the risk of infecIon We cannot prevent all diseases but can control them Basic Concepts in Infec#on Control Dental Clinic Bacterial aerosols and fomites Basic Concepts in Infec#on Control Dental Clinic Bacterial aerosols and fomites # 3 # 3 P A T I E N T Den#st & Clinic Staff P A T I E N T # 6 # 5 # 4 Den#st & Clinic Staff # 2 # 1 Family & Friends O t h e r P a t i e n t s Possible spread of a disease cluster Family & Friends Family & Friends O t h e r P a t i e n t s Family & Friends Possible areas of control to reduce risk of disease Routes of Transmission 1. Percutaneous high Microbes in Blood/Saliva – needle, sharp instruments 2. Contact high – Microbes in Blood/Saliva 12splash/spa5er of blood & body fluids 3. Inhala#on moderate Suspended Microbes – droplet nuclei and aerosols 4. Indirect contact low Microbes on Surfaces – Fomites/contaminated surfaces 34Condi#on ConjuncIviIs Staph. AcIve Strep. A Viral respiratory TB (acIve) TB (+ve PPD) Influenza Restr. Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Dura#on UnIl discharge ceases UnIl lesions have healed UnIl 24 hours aker starIng Tx UnIl acute symptoms resolve UnIl treated non-‐infecIous Evaluate for infecIous status (and care as needed) UnIl DHCW is asymptomaIc Hosted by Jim Gauthier, Providence Care, Kingston, Ontario www.webbertraining.com 2 Ra#onale for Dental Infec#on Control Dr. Raghunath Pu5aiah, Texas A&M University A Webber Training Teleclass Condi#on Restr. Dura#on Pediculosis (Lice) Yes UnIl treated and is with no lice HerpeIc whitlow Yes UnIl lesions heal Herpes -‐ Orofacial Yes UnIl clinical lesions are healed (need to be on regular anI-‐viral meds) Varicella (Ch. Pox) Yes UnIl lesions dry and crust Shingles (Zoster) Yes UnIl lesions dry and crust Hep-‐B (HBe anIgen) Yes UnIl HepaIIs-‐B e anIgen is negaIve (UP, expert panel and care) HepaIIs C No UP/SP, AsepIc techniques and care to reduce viral load HIV Yes Expert panel, UP/SP, anIviral meds Condi#on Measles Mumps Rubella Pertussis Diarrhea Enteroviral HepaIIs A Restr. Dura#on Yes UnIl 7 days aker rash appears Yes UnIl 9 days aker start of paroIIs Yes UnIl 5 days aker rash appears Yes UnIl 5 days aker start of effecIve anIbioIc therapy Yes UnIl symptoms resolve Yes UnIl symptoms resolve Yes UnIl 7 days from onset of Jaundice Biases towards Care of Infec#ous Pa#ents Defini#on: – To treat all pa#ents as poten#ally infec#ous and not to base the level of infec#on control on the appearance or disease status of pa#ent What defines the level of control? – Level of control to be based on type of procedure and reasonably an#cipated type of exposure -‐Dental InfecIon Control & Safety has been in the forefront of efforts all over the world Mother & Child -‐Both pracIcing denIsts and dental faculty have shown varying degrees of biases towards InfecIous Disease PaIents -‐Evidence from recent and past studies has shown— “in spite of regulaIons and educaIon, there exists a gap in understanding Standard PrecauIons” -‐Many may be influenced by sIgma towards ID paIents -‐Efforts in educaIon on sIgma, ethical issues and finally laws regulaIng equality need to be the mainstay Judgmental Approach Hosted by Jim Gauthier, Providence Care, Kingston, Ontario www.webbertraining.com 3 Ra#onale for Dental Infec#on Control Dr. Raghunath Pu5aiah, Texas A&M University A Webber Training Teleclass HBV &HIV status of paCents is always known (NO) % Double-‐gloving more appropriate for tx of ID paCents (NO) % Ind 15 Pak Tha Phi 12 35 20 Tai 33 Chi 13 S. K. USA 62 64 Ind 75 Pak Tha Phi 53 68 59 Tai 64 Chi 54 S. K. USA 69 69 All PaCents to be treated alike irrespecCve of ID (YES) Right to refuse care for InfecCous PaCent (NO) % Ind % 67 Pak Tha Phi 65 83 66 Tai 79 Chi 78 S. K. USA 36 79 Ind 20 Pak Tha Phi 18 31 41 Tai 30 Chi 17 S. K. USA 50 67 Medical History/appearance dictates level of IC (NO) Need for more training in InfecCon Control & Safety (Opinion) % Ind % 51 Pak Tha Phi 50 54 61 Tai 57 Chi 46 S. K. USA 86 72 Ind 84 Pak Tha Phi 94 73 82 Tai 91 Chi 94 S. K. USA 95 87 Respondent— -‐Comfortable treaIng paIents with ID 75.0% -‐Use AddiIonal PrecauIons for (ID) paIents 58.8% -‐Double-‐glove for paIent with Bloodborne Disease/STD 83.3% -‐Use Full PPE for ID paIent irrespecIve of Procedure 72.9% -‐Schedule ID paIents at a “separate Cme or day” 32.0% -‐Refused care for paIents with Bloodborne Diseases/STDs 52.6% -‐Have the right to refuse care for paIents with IDs 16.0% -‐Refused care for ID paIents-‐-‐others feel uncomfortable 22.4% -‐Others will not come if ID paIents treated in clinic 21.0% -‐InfecIous disease status is always known 27.6% -‐Treat paIent from abroad at my clinic 30.9% -‐PaIents from abroad more demanding of Dental Safety 87.5% Basic Measures of Control • There are three basic measures of control in Dental InfecIon Control— – SaniIzaIon – DisinfecIon – SterilizaIon “A process of physical cleaning to reduce the quan#ty of microbes and bioburden” • Use of disinfectant/cleaning solu#on and paper towels (surfaces) • Use of soap and brush (instruments) • Use of Ultrasonic methods (di-o) To be done before disinfec#on & steriliza#on -‐ Cri#cal, semi-‐cri#cal, non-‐cri#cal items & environmental surfaces • What is decontaminaIon? – “Public health Use of physical or chemical means to remove, inacIvate, or destroy bloodborne or other pathogens on a surface or item, to the point where they are no longer capable of transmi|ng infecIous parIcles, and the surface or item is rendered safe for handling, use, or disposal” (McGraw Hill Concise DicIonary of Modern Medicine). Hosted by Jim Gauthier, Providence Care, Kingston, Ontario www.webbertraining.com 4 Ra#onale for Dental Infec#on Control Dr. Raghunath Pu5aiah, Texas A&M University A Webber Training Teleclass Spaulding’s Classifica#on of Surfaces 1. Cri#cal: STERILIZATION • Items that pierce skin or mucosa – Explorers, scalpels, scalers, burs & other sharps Semi-‐Cri#cal: STERILIZATION • Non-‐sharp items that enter the oral cavity – Amalgam condensers, mirrors, handpiece Non-‐Cri#cal: DISINFECTION • Items not entering the oral cavity – Bracket table, face-‐bow, chair controls Environmental: HOUSEKEEPING • Walls, floors and environmental surfaces 1. Cri#cal Surfaces 2. Semi-‐cri#cal surfaces 3. Non-‐cri#cal surfaces 4. Environmental surfaces Steriliza#on Disinfec#on Sani#za#on 2. 3. 4. Spaulding’s Classifica#on of Surfaces CriIcal items 1. 2. 3. 4. Sharps that pierce the skin or mucosa Cri#cal: STERILIZATION • Items that pierce skin or mucosa – Explorers, scalpels, scalers, burs & other sharps Semi-‐Cri#cal: STERILIZATION • Non-‐sharp items that enter the oral cavity – Amalgam condensers, mirrors, handpiece Non-‐Cri#cal: DISINFECTION • Items not entering the oral cavity – Bracket table, face-‐bow, chair controls Environmental: HOUSEKEEPING • Walls, floors and environmental surfaces Hosted by Jim Gauthier, Providence Care, Kingston, Ontario www.webbertraining.com 5
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