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Development of Healthcare-Associated Infections: Role of the Built Environment

AHRQ's 2012 Annual Conference Slide Presentation

Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (1.1 MB).

Slide 1

Text Description is below the image.

Development of Healthcare-Associated Infections: Role of the Built Environment

James P. Steinberg, MD
Division of Infectious Diseases
Emory University School of Medicine

Slide 2

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Healthcare Associated Infections

  • Infections acquired while in a health care facility.
  • Types:
    • Endogenous—pathogen arises from normal microbiota due to factors within the health care setting.
    • Exogenous—pathogen acquired from the health care environment.

Slide 3

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Modes of Transmission of Infectious Agents Design and Built Environment Prevention Strategies

ModeFacility Design
Contact 
   - Direct (person-to-person)Hand rub dispenser placement
   - Indirect (fomites/environment)New surface materials
Large Droplet (>5µm)Spatial separation
Small Droplet (airborne)Negative pressure
Common source (water)Temperature control/disinfection

Slide 4

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Chain of Transmission

  • Traditional model:
    • Chain of transmission:
      • Pathogens.
      • Reservoirs/sources.
      • Mode of spread.
      • Patients.
    • "Breaking" a link of the chain can interrupt transmission.
  • Linear chain model may underestimate complexity.

Image: Two lengths of chain are shown; one has a broken link.

Slide 5

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Variables Influencing Transmission of Pathogens Healthcare Setting

  • Patient/staff/family colonization:
    • Colonization pressure.
  • Biologic properties of pathogen.
  • Antibiotic pressure.
  • Contaminated environment:
    • Surfaces.
    • Equipment.
    • Water sources.
  • Intensity of contact.
  • Duration of exposure.
  • Adherence to infection control measures.

Slide 6Text Description is below the image.

Low colonization pressure: poor compliance with infection control measures less likely to cause on transmission of MRSA

Image: A floor plan shows the layout of a hospital ward. Bed 1, where an MRSA infection occurred, is circled in red. Beds 9 through 12 are indicated by a bracket.

Nurse caring for beds 9-12 cleans hands 40% of time, but no cross transmission.

Slide 7

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High Colonization Pressure: Small breaks in infection control measures could be enough to cause transmission

Image: A floor plan shows the layout of a hospital ward, as shown in Slide 18. The MRSA infection has spread from Bed 1 to Beds 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, and 14 . Bed 8 is circled in red. Beds 6 through 9 are indicated by a bracket.

Nurse caring for beds 6-9 cleans hands 80% of time—but patient in bed 8 acquires MRSA.

Slide 8

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Chain Of Transmission

Image: A model shows the chain of transmission of pathogens from sources inside and outside the hospital to susceptible patients who might become infected.

Slide 9

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Chain Of Transmission: An Intervention Model

Image: The model showing the chain of transmission of pathogens now has notes added about opportunities for interventions to prevent infection through the built environment:

  • External Source—Barriers, Filters.
  • Reservoir or Source in the Hospital—Disinfect, Eliminate.
  • Colonized/Infected Host—Hand hygiene, PPE (personal protective equipment), Other barriers, Isolation.

Slide 10

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NIH Outbreak of Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (KPC)

  • 18 patients, 11 deaths, 6 from KPC.
  • Sophisticated analysis with whole-genome sequencing.
  • Transmission map developed based on presumed person-to-person transmission.
  • However, environmental sources uncovered.
  • Outbreak strain in 6 sink drains and a ventilator.
  • Despite intensive investigation, role if environment unclear.
  • Environmental decontamination performed.

Snitkin et al. Science Translational Med 2012 vol 4.

Slide 11

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Curtains—Prototype of Issues Relevant to Role of Environment

  • Used for privacy/partitions.
  • Often contaminated:
    • VRE, MRSA, C. difficile.
    • Transmission to hands occurs but is inefficient:
      • Trillis ICHE 2008;29:1174.
  • Have been linked to outbreaks:
    • Acinetobacter in ICU, transmission interrupted with multiple interventions including curtain replacement:
      • Das JHI 2002;50:110.
  • Role in endemic transmission unclear.

Images: Two photographs show women standing with their hands on a privacy curtain.

Slide 12

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Curtains—Prototype of Issues Relevant to Role of Environment

  • Cleaning recommendations don’t specify frequency:
    • HICPAC—Clean when visibly soiled.
  • Newer technologies (impregnated materials) marketed:
    • Can reduce contamination.
    • No data on prevention of transmission.
  • Hand hygiene can mitigate risk.
  • Design strategies that eliminate need of curtains may be optimal but are they cost effective?

Images: A photograph shows a woman standing with her hand on a privacy curtain. Another photograph shows vertical blinds/vents on a window.

Slide 13

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Challenges in Assessing Role of Environment in Transmission of Pathogens

  • Environmental contamination common and dynamic.
  • Transmission often requires humans as intermediaries can be impacted by behavior.
  • Overlapping pathways of transmission exist and obfuscate role of environment.
  • Most transmission events are silent:
    • Lead to colonization not infection.
  • Studying transmission events and impact of environment is difficult.
  • Role of the environment may be underappreciated.

Slide 14

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Challenges in Assessing Role of Environment in Transmission of Pathogens

  • Interventions to reduce environmental contamination (materials, cleaning methods) often measure microbial burden and not colonization/infection.
  • Build/design interventions sometimes impossible to study in controlled or rigorous way.
  • Given paucity of data to inform facility design decisions, cost considerations very important.
  • Behavior or process changes may reduce transmission of pathogens independently from design/technologic solutions:
    • Design can influence behavior.
    • Technologic/built solutions may be easier to implement.
Page last reviewed December 2012
Internet Citation: Development of Healthcare-Associated Infections: Role of the Built Environment : AHRQ's 2012 Annual Conference Slide Presentation. December 2012. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. https://archive.ahrq.gov/news/events/conference/2012/track_a/61_steinberg_zimring/steinberg.html

 

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