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HOSPITAL ASSOCIATED INFECTIONS FACTS, CONCERNS AND PREVENTION Dr.T.V.Rao MD Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 1 1/18/2018

HOSPITAL ASSOCIATED INFECTIONSFACTS, CONCERNS AND PREVENTION

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Page 1: HOSPITAL ASSOCIATED INFECTIONSFACTS, CONCERNS AND PREVENTION

HOSPITAL ASSOCIATED INFECTIONSFACTS, CONCERNS AND PREVENTION

Dr.T.V.Rao MD

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 11/18/2018

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The very first

requirement in

a hospital is

that it should do

the sick no

harm

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 21/18/2018

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Scientific era continues . . . . .

Ignaz Semmelweiss (1818-1865)

• Obstetrician, practised in Vienna

• Studied puerperal (childbed) fever

• Established that high maternal mortality was due to failure of doctors to wash hands after post-mortems

• Reduced maternal mortality by 90%

• Ignored and ridiculed by colleagues

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 31/18/2018

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INFECTION• Definition: Injurious contamination of body or parts of the

body by bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa and rickettsia or by the toxin that they may manifest as INFECTION .

• Infection may be local or generalized and spread throughout the body.

•Can manifest in many forms causes increased human suffering , morbidity and Mortality

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 41/18/2018

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1/18/2018 Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 5

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Main Sources of Infection

• Person to person via hands of health-care providers, patients, and visitors

• Personal clothing and equipment (e.g. Stethoscopes, flashlights etc.)

• Environmental contamination

• Airborne transmission

• Hospital staff who are carriers

• Rare common-source outbreaks

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Campaigns to Decrease Infection Rates

•WHO “Clean hands are safer hands”campaign

•Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) “prevent antimicrobial resistance” campaign in health-care settings

• Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) “5 million lives” campaign• Developing country focus

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Hospital Infection•Hospital infection is also called Nosocomial infection.

• It is the single largest factor that adversely affects both the patient and the hospital

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 81/18/2018

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Sings of Infection•Once the infectious agent enters the host it begins to proliferate and reacts with the defence mechanisms of the body producing infection symptoms and signs: pain, swelling, redness, functional disorders, rise in temperature and pulse rate and leucocytosis.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 91/18/2018

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The risk of infection is always present.

• Patient may acquire infection before admission to the hospital = Community acquired infection.

•Patient may get infected inside the hospital = Nosocomial infection.

• It includes infections not present nor incubating at admission, infections that appear more than 48 hours after admission, those acquired in the hospital but appear after discharge also occupational infections among staff.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 101/18/2018

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Cannot autoclave patients

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Life is a experience start learningThe TIME IS TICKING

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HEALTH CARE ASSOCIATED INFECTION (NOSOCOMIAL)

• Infections that are a result of health care delivery, not present at admission• EXOGENOUS• ENDOGENOUS• IATROGENIC

Refer to Potter & Perry Table 34-2 Pg. 648 (Sites for Causes of HAI’s)

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Common Health-Care Associated Infections

•Urinary Tract InfectionSurgical/Traumatic Wound Infection

•Respiratory Tract infections

•Bloodstream infections

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Urinary Catheterization A major cause of Hospital Associated Infections

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 151/18/2018

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Defining a Nosocomial infection

• A nosocomial infection (nos-oh-koh-mi-al), also known as a hospital-acquired infection or HAI, is an infection whose development is favored by a hospital environment, such as one acquired by a patient during a hospital visit or one developing among hospital staff. Such infections include fungal and bacterial infections and are aggravated by the reduced resistance of individual patient

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 161/18/2018

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Leading causes of death53.9 million from all causes, worldwide

1/18/2018 Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI

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Major Sites of Nosocomial Infections

•Urinary tract infection

•Bloodstream infection

•Pneumonia (ventilator-associated)

•Surgical site infection

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Sources of SSIs• Endogenous: patient’s skin or mucosal flora

• Increased risk with devitalized tissue, fluid collection, edema, larger inocula

• Exogenous• Includes OR environment/instruments, OR air, personnel

• Hematogenous/lymphatic: seeding of surgical site from a distant focus of infection

• May occur days to weeks following the procedure

• Most infections occur due to organisms implanted during the procedure

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When you say Hospital acquired infection

• Infection which was neither present nor incubating at the time of admission

• Includes infection which only becomes apparent after discharge from hospital but which was acquired during hospitalisation (Rcn, 1995)

•Also called nosocomial infection

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 201/18/2018

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Sources of Hospital acquired infections

•1.Patients own flora - Endogenous (50%) Autoinfection ( Greatest source of

potential danger)2.Environment - Exogenous(15%)

(Air-5%; Instruments-10%) 3.Another Patient/Staff - Cross Infection (35%)

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 211/18/2018

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Burke J Infection control-a problem for patient safety New Eng Journal

of Medicine (February 13, 2003)

Types of Infections

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ARE OUR HANDS CLEAN

Un washed hand

JUST NO The hands of staff are the commonest vehicles by which microorganisms are transmitted between patients. Hand washing is accepted as the single most important measure in infection

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Steps in Hand Washing

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What to Use for Hand Washing

Alcoholic hand disinfection is generally used in Europe, while hand washing with medicated soap is more commonly practised in the United States.

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What is the Best Soap to wash Hands

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Alcohol-based hand rubs are more effective against most bacteria and many viruses than either medicated or non-medicated soaps

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CAN I USE THE ALCHOOL HAND WASH

Require less time to use

Result in a significantly greater reduction in bacterial numbers than soap and water in many clinical situations

Cause less irritation to the skin

Can be made readily accessible to HCWs

Are more cost effective

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Three Levels of Infection Control

Sanitization – cleaning and scrubbing instruments and equipment to remove contaminated materials and microorganisms

Disinfection – second level used on instruments and equipments that come in contact with intact mucous membrane

Sterilization – complete destruction of all microorganisms-

pathogenic, beneficial, and harmless- surface of instrument

and equipment

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI1/18/2018

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Sanitization MethodsCollecting instruments – place in container with water and neutral pH detergent until you can get to them.

Use utility gloves always and mask, eye protection and protective clothing if blood, body fluids or tissue are present

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI1/18/2018

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Standard Precautions•Apply standard precautions to allpatients regardless of their diagnosis, and to all contaminated equipmentsand materials.

•Use judgment in determining which protective barriers are necessary.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 311/18/2018

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Scope of Infection Control • Aiming at preventing spread of infection:

• Standard precautions: these measures must be applied during every patient care, during exposure to any potentially infected material or body fluids as blood and others.

• Components:• A. Hand washing.• B. Barrier precautions.• C. Sharp disposal.• D. Handling of contaminated material

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 321/18/2018

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1st principale of infection prevention

at least 35-50% of all healthcare-associated infections are asociated with only 5 patient care practices:

•Use and care of urinary catheters

• Use and care of vascular access lines

• Therapy and support of pulmonary functions

• Surveillance of surgical procedures

• Hand hygiene and standard precautions

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 331/18/2018

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Healthcare-Associated Urinary Tract Infection

•Urinary tract infection (UTI) causes ~ 40% of hospital-acquired infections

• Most infections due to urinary catheters

• 25% of inpatients are catheterized

• Leads to increased morbidity and costs

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 341/18/2018

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Nurses should be Familiar INTERVENTIONS

• ISOLATION PRECAUTIONS

• HYPERTHERMIA INTERVENTION• ELIMINATE UNDERLYING CAUSE• FEVER MANAGEMENT

• HEALTH TEACHING

• ANTIBIOTIC THERAPY

• PSYCHOSOCIAL SUPPORT

• HEALTH CARE RESOURCES

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Read Manuals on Isolation Precautions

• CDC and OSHA Guidelines on

1. Contact

2. Droplet

3. Airborne

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Why Hand WashingMy hands always carry microbes

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 371/18/2018

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Impression of my Hand Showing the Growth of Bacteria

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HAND WASHING• Proper hand washing is the single

most important way to prevent and reduce infections

• Wash and rinse hands for 15 seconds, using a dry paper towel to turn off faucet

• Alcohol based hand wash is also available in all patient care areas

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 391/18/2018

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Hands should be washed:

• Before and after patient contact

• Before putting on gloves and after taking them off

• After touching blood and body substances (or contaminated patient-care equipment), broken skin, or mucous membranes (even if you wear gloves)

• Between different procedures on the same patient

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 401/18/2018

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HAND WASHING

Hand washing is the single most effective precaution for prevention of infection transmission between patients and staff.

Hand washing with plain soap is mechanical removal of soil and transient bacteria (for 10- 15 sec.)

Hand antisepsis is removal & destroy of transient flora using anti-microbial soap or alcohol based hand rub (for 60 sec.)

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 411/18/2018

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Methods in Hand Washing

• Surgical hand scrub: removal or destruction of transient flora and reduction of resident flora using anti-microbial soap or alcohol based detergent with effective rubbing (for least 2-3 min)

• Our hands and fingers are our best friends but still could be our enemies if they carry infective organisms and transmit them to our bodies and to those whom we care for.

•Sinks & soap must be found in every patient care room. Doctors, nurses must comply to hand washing policy.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 421/18/2018

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Children too are at Risk from Hospital Infections.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 431/18/2018

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Hand Hygiene TechniquesMany Ways

1. Alcohol hand rub

2. Routine hand wash 10-15 seconds

3. Aseptic procedures 1 minute

4. Surgical wash 3-5 minutes

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 441/18/2018

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Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI

Risk Reduction: Antimicrobial Pre-Operative Shower

Chlorhexidine Gluconate –Primary choice

Iodophores

Hexachlorophene

45

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Barrier Precautions1. Gloves:Disposable gloves must be worn when:a) Direct contact with B/BF is expected. b) Examining a lacerated or non-intact skin e.g wound dressing.c) Examination of oropharynx, GIT, UIT

and dental procedures.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 461/18/2018

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Barrier Precautionsd) Working directly with contaminated instruments or equipment.e) HCW has skin cuts, lesions and dermatitisSterile gloves are used for invasive procedures.GLOVES MUST BE of good quality, suitable size and material. Never reused.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 471/18/2018

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Barrier Precautions

•Masks & Protective eye wear:• MUST BE USED WHEN: engaged in procedures likely to generate

droplets of B/BF or bone chips

• During surgical operations to protect wound from staff breathings, …

• Masks must be of good quality, properly fixed on mouth and nasal openings.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 481/18/2018

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Barrier Precautions• 3) Gowns/ Aprons:

• Are required when:

• Spraying or spattering of blood or body fluids is anticipated e.gsurgical procedures.

• Gowns must not permit blood or body fluids to pass through.

• Sterile linen or disposable ones are used for sterile procedures.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 491/18/2018

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What to do if exposed to blood / body fluids

•Puncture wounds should be washed immediately and the wound should be caused to bleed

• If skin contamination should occur, wash the area immediately

•Splashes to the nose or mouth should be flushed with water

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 501/18/2018

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If Exposed

•Eye splashes require irrigation with clean water, saline, or a sterile irritant

•Most importantly: Complete a GBMC Employee Incident Report. Report exposure to charge nurse and Agency immediately

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 511/18/2018

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Sharp precautions• Needle stick and sharp injuries carry the risk of blood born infection

e.g AIDS, HCV,HBV and others.

• Sharp injuries must be reported and notified

• NEVER TO RECAP NEEDLES• Dispose of used needles and small sharps immediately in puncture

resistant boxes (sharp boxes).

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 521/18/2018

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Do not Recap Needles A threat to LIFE

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 531/18/2018

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Protecting Yourself from Blood-Borne Pathogens

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Aseptic technique• Sepsis - harmful infection by bacteria• Asepsis - prevention of sepsis• Minimise risk of introducing pathogenic micro-organisms into susceptible sites

• Prevent transfer of potential pathogens from contaminated site to other sites, patients or staff

• Follow local policy of your hospital

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 551/18/2018

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Isolation• Single room or group

• Source or protective

• Source - isolation of infected patient• mainly to prevent airborne transmission via respiratory

droplets

• respiratory MRSA, pulmonary tuberculosis

• Protective - isolation of immune-suppressed patient (May, 2000)

• Significant psychological effects (Davies et al, 1999)

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 561/18/2018

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Linen handling and disposal

• Bed making and linen changing techniques

• Gloves and apron - handling contaminated linen

• Appropriate laundry bags

• Avoid contamination of clean linen

• Hazards of on-site ward-based laundering

• NHS Executive guidelines (1995)

• Follow local policy of your hospital

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 571/18/2018

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Waste disposal• Clinical waste - HIGH risk

• potentially/actually contaminated waste including body fluids and human tissue

• yellow plastic sack, tied prior to incineration

• Household waste - LOW risk• paper towels, packaging, dead flowers, other waste which

is not dangerously contaminated• black plastic sack, tied prior to incineration

• Follow local policy of your Hospitals

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 581/18/2018

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Spillage of body fluids• PPE - disposable gloves, apron

• Soak up with paper towels, kitchen roll

• Cover area with hypochlorite solution e.g., Milton, for several minutes

• Clean area with warm water and detergent, then dry

• Treat waste as clinical waste - yellow plastic sack

• Follow local policy (May, 2000)

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 591/18/2018

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Environmental cleaning• Recent concern regarding poor hygiene in hospital

environments (NHSE, 1999)

• Some pathogens survive for long periods in dust, debris and dirt

• Poor hygiene standards - hazardous to patients and staff (May, 2000)

• Report poor hygiene to Domestic Services (UKCC, 1992)

• “Hospitals should do the sick no harm” (Nightingale, 1854)

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Risk assessment• No risk of contact/splashing with blood/body

fluids - PPE not required

• Low or moderate risk of contact/splashing - wear gloves and plastic apron

• High risk of contact/splashing - wear gloves, plastic apron, gown, eye/face protection (Rcn, 1995)

• Cerebrospinal fluid, peritoneal fluid, pleural fluid, synovial fluid, amniotic fluid, semen, vaginal secretions, and

• Any other fluid containing visible blood e.g., urine, faeces (Rcn, 1995)

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 611/18/2018

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In spite many developments in medicine and asepsis hand washing still the best solution

Hand hygiene is the simplest, most effective measure for

preventing hospital-acquired infections.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 621/18/2018

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Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 631/18/2018

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Ways to overcome the nosocomial infections

•Besides, hospitals need to have infection control committees to conduct outcome and process surveillance for nosocomial infections. This committee should meet regularly and publish the results of their surveillance. At the same time, healthcare institutions should adopt new and better technology, like closed system IV fluids, in order to reduce the rates of infections.

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 641/18/2018

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Basic hygiene is key to control infections

• Ignaz Semmelweis in 1847 demonstrated that washing hands saves lives

• Old bacteria are causing new problems

• New viral and prion diseases are causing new problems

• Reluctance to wash hands still the single most important cause of HAI (ICNA, 1998)

•Growing concern about poor hospital hygiene

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 651/18/2018

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Nurses should be familiar with Surveillance Activities

•Operative Procedures

•Critical Care Units (MICU, SICU, NICU)

•Targeted Surveillance

•Outbreak Investigation

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Benchmarking Hospital Acquired Infections

•CDC’s Hospital Infections Program

•Submit monthly data on ICU infections

•Benchmarking with similar hospitals

•Networking opportunities

•Annual reports

•Start having a Infection Audit

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Surveillance DataImproves the Patient Safety

• USES

•Improve patient outcomes by

• modifying patient care practices

• reducing length of stay•Identify education needs•Evaluate new products•Identify new opportunities

for improvement

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Nurses should Evaluate their Outcome

• MEASURE SUCCESS OF INFECTION CONTROL TECHNIQUES

• COMPARE PATIENT’S RESPONSE TO ACTUAL OUTCOME

• WHAT WILL YOU DO IF GOAL/OUTCOMES NOT ACHIEVED?

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Our Hands are Threat to LIFEJust Washing can Save Many LIVES

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 701/18/2018

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Let us support our hospitals with clean hands

Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 711/18/2018

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Soap Water and Common sense are Best Antiseptics- William Osler

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I care Human life I wash My HandsAre you ?

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WE ARE ALL RESPONSIBLE ININFECTION CONTROL

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•Program Created by Dr.T.V.Rao MD for bringing basic awareness on Hospital associated Infections

•Email

[email protected]

1/18/2018 Dr.T.V.Rao MD @HAI 75