Biohazard Material Handling and Disposition (Blood, Microbiology, Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease) for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)

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Biohazard Material Handling and Disposition (Blood, Microbiology, Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease)

 

Guidelines:

  • Infectious agents include bacteria, viruses, and prions
  • Biohazardous material = living organisms/toxins = threat to human health
  • Hand hygiene is the most important factor in prevention of infection
  • Focus on hand hygiene, appropriate use of PPE, and environmental infection control
    measures

    • Meticulous application and removal of PPE is the cornerstone of preventing transmission of bloodborne pathogens within the healthcare setting

 

Considerations:

  • Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
    • Infectious, human prion disease
    • Symptoms include rapidly progressing dementia, memory loss, rapid physical
      and mental deterioration
  • Why is this significant?
    • Positive diagnosis can be made only by direct examination of affected brain tissue
    • CJD is usually resistant to conventional chemical and physical decontamination
      methods
    • Special protocols for instrument care after exposure to prions
    • Prevention of CJD relies primarily on rigorous disinfection of neurosurgical
      instruments

 

Nurse’s role:

  • For all biohazardous material handling:
    • Standard and transmission-based precautions
      • PPE
      • Hand Hygiene
    • Interdisciplinary team communication
      • Professional and regulatory standards
    • Enhanced sharps safety measures
    • Environmental cleaning protocols
    • Instrument care protocols
  • Disposition, know your sources of truth:
    • EPA guidelines: waste disposal
    • CDC: infection control and prevention
    • OSHA: employee safety
    • TJC: patient safety
    • AORN: perioperative nursing practice and guidelines
    • APIC: infection preventionist practice and guidelines

 

Pitfalls:

  • SSIs remain a common HAI
  • Need for vigilant sterile conscience
  • TJC National Patient Safety Goal: Implement Evidence-Based Practices for Preventing
    Surgical Site Infections

    • Elements of performance outlines education, policy, and procedural practices aimed at reducing the risk of SSI.
    • CMS has required reporting by hospitals if they are to receive full Medicare Payment

 

Examples:

  • Bloodborne pathogens of perioperative significance include:
    • Hepatitis B Virus (HBV)
    • Hepatitis C Virus (HCV)
    • Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
  • Within the perioperative setting, these pathogens are more common transmitted parenterally via:
    • Needlestick
    • Sharps-related injury
    • Splash exposure to a mucous membrane
  • Environmental infection control measures:
    • Single patient room
    • Dedicated, preferably disposable medical equipment
    • Limited use of needles/sharps
    • Heightened sharps safety awareness
    • Avoid aerosol-generating procedures
    • Vigilant hand hygiene

 

Linchpins (Key Points):

  • Appropriate PPE is Key!
  • Vigilant Hand Hygiene!
  • Environmental Infection Control!
  • Interdisciplinary Team Communication!

 

 

 

 

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Transcript

References

 

 

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