The Safe Care Campaign to Prevent the Spread
of Infection
Armando and Victoria Nahum formed the
Safe Care Campaign after three members of their family,
including their son, acquired infections during a hospital
stay. Unfortunately, the Nahum's son died of his infection and
Victoria has an incurable auto-immune disease
too.
The Safe Care Campaign is an organization that was
created to help stamp out HAIs also known as hospital acquired
infections. The main objective is to precipitate important
paradigm shifts in the practices and theories in a health care
setting in regards to different types of hygiene as well as
precautionary measures to ensure safe patient care.
This organization is the answer that a serious problem that
one family faced in regards to hospital acquired infections.
Armando and Victoria Nahum formed the Safe Care Campaign after
three members of their family, including their son, acquired
infections during a hospital stay. Unfortunately, the Nahum's
son died of his infection and Victoria has an incurable
auto-immune disease too.
The purpose of the Safe Care Campaign is to educate and
promote hygiene safety as well as precautionary measures in all
medical caregivers whether in a hospital setting, nursing home
setting or other medical facilities. Not only does the Safe
Care Campaign work with the medical institutions, they also
work with patients as well so that they know what is safe and
what practices to look for as well.
To understand more about what the Safe Care Campaign is
working for, you have to understand more about hospital
acquired infections. Often these infections are also called
nosocomial infections which basically mean that the patient
contracts an infection in the hospital when that patient was
admitted for another reason entirely. Nosocomial infections
also apply to those that incubate while in the hospital but
then appear once discharged.
Most nosocomial infections aka HAIs are the result of some
type of contact transmission. Direct transmission is body to
body contact and could be as simple as a touch of the hand.
Indirect contact occurs when contaminated medical instruments
like syringes, needles, wound dressings or even gloves touch
the susceptible patient. This often occurs when the medical
caregiver does not change their gloves or immediately wash
their hands before touching the patient.
Infection Control JobsInfection control officers study all possible scenarios.
The Reason for Infection Control in Health Care
Nosocomial infections aka hospital acquired infections happen every day and it is estimate that up to 10 % of all hospital patients acquire a secondary infection from their stay. Some patients are more susceptible to infection and have weak immune systems. In addition, certain medical practices or lack thereof contribute to the increase of infection as well.
Because of highly infectious bacteria like staph, there has been an increase in infection control measures.
Infection Control Guidelines
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The most common way that germs are transmitted to the
patient while in the hospital is through a breach in the body's
defenses. This breach could occur as a simple paper cut on a
finger to the eyes, nose, mouth, IV entry site, catheter site,
feeding tubes and more. When an infection occurs through one of
these sites, it can often be blamed on poor hygiene such as
contaminated equipment and lack of hand washing.
These are the problems that the Safe Care Campaign is trying
to combat through educating not only the patients entering
medical facilities but also the medical community as well. Just
as with all infection control measures, the best defense
according to the Safe Care Campaign is thorough hand
hygiene.
Proper hand hygiene involves washing the hands and wrists
with warm water and soap. The soap should be lathered up for at
least 30 seconds and thoroughly rinsed off. The hands should be
dried via a paper towel or air drier. And if soap and water is
not available, an alcohol-based hand sanitizer should be used
by applying a dollop in one hand. You should rub the hands
together, getting in between fingers, under fingernails and
even up to the wrist until the sanitizer is dry. The Safe Care
Campaign believes that if everyone who enters a hospital room
washes their hands first before approaching the patient, more
than half of the nosocomial aka hospital acquired infections
could be prevented. Latest News Regarding Infection Control ?
10/15/2008
Hospital hands it to sterilising (Central Western Daily)
THE SPREAD of multi-resistant infections is a problem for hospitals everywhere with extra infection control procedures costly and time consuming.
Hospital hands it to sterilising (Central Western Daily)
10/15/2008
Clostridium Difficile Infection in Long-Term Care: Tailored Approaches to Management Complimentary Continuing ... (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance)
Clostridium difficile infection is increasingly being seen in older adults, especially among residents of long-term care facilities . This is further complicated by the emergence of a new resistant strain of C. difficile associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality.
Clostridium Difficile Infection in Long-Term Care: Tailored Approaches to Management Complimentary Continuing ... (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance)
10/14/2008
Greater Latrobe student diagnosed with MRSA infection (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)
A student at Mountain View Elementary School in Unity has been diagnosed with an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection, school officials said.
Greater Latrobe student diagnosed with MRSA infection (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)
10/15/2008
Watchdog questions MRSA progress (BBC News)
Concerns are being raised about NHS performance on infection control in England - just weeks after ministers announced its target had been met.
Watchdog questions MRSA progress (BBC News)
10/13/2008
Hospital gets infection all-clear (BBC News)
A Surrey hospital ordered to improve its infection control is given the all-clear by the health watchdog.
Hospital gets infection all-clear (BBC News)
10/15/2008
Clostridium Difficile Infection in Long-Term Care: Tailored Approaches to Management Complimentary Continuing ... (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance)
Clostridium difficile infection is increasingly being seen in older adults, especially among residents of long-term care facilities . This is further complicated by the emergence of a new resistant strain of C. difficile associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality.
Clostridium Difficile Infection in Long-Term Care: Tailored Approaches to Management Complimentary Continuing ... (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance)
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