Hospital + Healthcare Spring 2021

Page 14

INFECTION CONTROL

Infection prevention and control in

virtual healthcare settings Amy Sarcevic

Shortly after welcoming the arrival of her second child Josh, Kelly Evans’* blissful ‘post-birth bubble’ burst, much earlier than she had imagined.

L

ess than 24 hours after returning home from hospital with her newborn, the Sydney-based mother noticed her two-yearold daughter, Milla, had white spots on her tongue. With doctors suspecting hand foot and mouth disease — a condition that can be dangerous for neonates — her eldest was forced to quarantine at her grandmother’s house for the 10 days that followed. “It wasn’t the homecoming experience we had been planning, but thankfully the kids had not been in physical contact and there were no signs of the disease having spread. “Like any two year old, Milla can be quite boisterous and we were careful not to let her handle her little brother right away. Thank goodness we didn’t as a more serious outcome could have occurred,” she recalls. While Ms Evans is generally happy with the post-hospital care she received, she believes more effort is needed to educate patients on infection prevention and control (IPC) — particularly when managing health care at home, without the watch of professionals. “I received a lot of support upon my discharge from hospital, but I do feel tips around infection prevention were somewhat lacking. The facts I received also contradict things I’ve read online,” she said. 14

HOSPITAL + HEALTHCARE

Stopping the spread

While best practice for IPC does exist, the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Healthcare notes that there is often “a gap between what is known to be best practice, and the care that is delivered”. “Despite the fact that there are guidelines and strong evidence regarding best practice, hand hygiene compliance is not optimal, preventable infections occur, and antimicrobial resistance is an increasing issue,” it notes in a recent report.1 Indeed, every year in Australia 180,000 patients suffer healthcare-associated infections (HAIs),1 resulting in prolonged antibiotic usage, increased patient morbidity and reduced quality of life. HAIs are also costly, with one state finding that excess costs linked to just 126 surgical-site infections totalled more than $5 million.1 Within virtual health care, the need for epidemiological rigour is heightened — as demonstrated by the COVID-19 pandemic, in which thousands of COVID-19 patients throughout NSW have been treated from their homes.

“Every year in Australia 180,000 patients suffer healthcare-associated infections.”

Kathy Dempsey, NSW Chief Infection Prevention and Control & Healthcare Associated Infections Advisor at the Clinical Excellence Commission (CEC), believes that, while the rise of at-home care is generally a positive development for patients and IPC, there are always opportunities to improve patient safety across the virtual care ecosystem. “Quite often in the home, infection risks are easier to mitigate against as you don’t have other patients in close proximity — nor lots of SPRING 2021

physical interactions with workers. That said, we shouldn’t get complacent,” she said to Hospital + Healthcare. “Homes can introduce new risks that aren’t as prevalent in hospitals — pets, shared washing and eating facilities, and reduced medical surveillance, for example. While these risks are tightly managed by clinics, there is still potential for errors to occur.” Although a barrage of information is typically handed out when discharging patients from

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