Conducting effective infection control surveillance

Infection preventionists urged to 'pick their battles'


When conducting effective infection control surveillance, infection preventionists should "pick their battles," according to an article on the Contagion Live website.

At the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) Spring 2017 Conference, Laurie Conway, RN, PhD, CIC, delivered a presentation explaining that infection preventionists need to “pick their battles,” when it comes to surveillance targets. 

“Surveillance takes up about 44 percent of our time, so we need to choose wisely when we say we are going to monitor and act on something,”  Laurie Conway, RN, PhD, CIC, said. 

Having rational surveillance targets is a “core component of any Infection Prevention and Control program and mandatory surveillance targets are usually chosen due to “their preventability and ease of comparison, not local risk,” she said.

Read the article.

 



April 18, 2017


Topic Area: Infection Control


Recent Posts

Balancing Act: Designing for Safety and Flexibility

By understanding NFPA 99 requirements, facilities can be better designed to meet current needs and anticipate future challenges.


Methodist Healthcare Breaks Ground on Methodist ER Medina Valley

Construction began in March 2026 and is projected for completion by March 2027.


Fire Protection in Healthcare: Why Active and Passive Systems Must Work as One

Sprinklers, smoke compartments and firestopping can form an interdependent safety strategy.


Building Envelope Design: Beyond Energy Efficiency

An integrated approach to envelope design can create more comfortable and energy-efficient hospitals.


Outpatient Surge Reshapes Long-Term Strategy for Medical Outpatient Buildings

Demographic tailwinds, policy uncertainty and shifting care models are pushing health systems to rethink how and where they invest in outpatient facilities.


 
 


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.