ES plays a growing role in fighting HAIs

Blog on CDC website says organisms that are difficult to kill and impossible to treat make environmental cleaning more important for the safety of patients


Environmental services professionals play a growing role in fighting hospital-acquired infections because organisms that are difficult to kill and impossible to treat make environmental cleaning more important for the safety of patients, according to a blog on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website.

While hand hygiene remains the most important infection prevention and control measure, the role of the care environment in preventing the transmission of harmful pathogens is becoming increasingly clear, the blog said.

"Germs such as Clostridium difficile, hepatitis B virus, methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus, and emerging threats such as Ebola virus cannot thrive when we have taken proper steps to remove them from the environment," according to the blog.

CDC’s Guidelines for Environmental Infection Control in Health-Care Facilities  and AHE’s Practice Guidance for Environmental Cleaning 2nd Edition both highlight the implementation of evidence-based practices.

Read the article.

 

 



September 21, 2015


Topic Area: Environmental Services


Recent Posts

ISSA Introduces Healthcare Platform to Advance Safer, Cleaner Patient Environments

This new resource integrates training, research and cross-sector collaboration to raise care standards and improve patient outcomes.


Third-Party Tracking Settlement is a Compliance Wake-Up Call for Healthcare Facilities Managers

Mount Sinai Health System agrees to a $5.3 million settlement to resolve claims it improperly shared patient data with Facebook through tracking tools.


ECU Health Behavioral Health Hospital Hosts Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony for New Facility

The new facility features 144 beds and a healing environment for behavioral health patients.


Aspire Rural Health System Reports Data Security Incident

Upon detecting the unauthorized activity, Aspire immediately worked to contain the incident and launched a thorough investigation.


Fatal Flaws: Strategies for Active Attackers

Anything that goes wrong with the response is the liability exposure of the organization — not the employee and not the police.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.