hello quizlet
Home
Subjects
Expert solutions
Create
Study sets, textbooks, questions
Log in
Sign up
Upgrade to remove ads
Only $35.99/year
NCLEX Precautions review; standard, contact, airborne, droplet
Flashcards
Learn
Test
Match
Flashcards
Learn
Test
Match
Terms in this set (27)
Standard Precautions:
1. wash your hands (*Most important step in infection control, prevents nosocomial infections)
2. DON gloves (before coming in contact with anything wet, i.e. broken skin, mucous membranes, blood, body fluids, soiled instruments, contaminated waste materials.
3. wash hands again upon removal of gloves and between patients
Contact Precautions:
Before entering:
1.wash hands
2. DON gown then gloves
Upon entering:
1. use disposable equipment when possible
2. when not available clean and disinfect all equipment before removing from room
Before leaving the patient's room:
1. Remove gloves then gown
2. Wash hands
Contact Precautions Transporting patient:
1. PT should perform hand hygeine and wear a clean gown
2. For direct contact with pt, nurse or care provider should wear a gown and gloves.
3. Notify receiving area
Common Microorganisms which require Contact Precautions :
1. Antibiotic Resistant Organisms (Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureu (MRSA), Extended spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL), Penicillin resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae (PRSP), Multi-drug resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa (MDRP))
2. Scabies
3. Herpes Zoster (Shingles) localized
4. Diarrhea, Clostrididum difficile
Airborne Contact Precautions:
Before entering:
1.Wash hands
2. Don N95 Respirator (Mask)
3. Don gown then gloves
*Negative Pressure Isolation Room KEEP DOOR CLOSED
Before leaving pt's room:
1. Remove gloves then gown NOT N95 mask
2. Wash hands
After leaving pt's room:
1. Shut door
2. Wash hands
3. Remove N95 mask
4. Wash hands
Airborne Contact Precautions Transporting patient:
1. Patient must wear a surgical or procedure mask and a clean gown
2. Patient must wash hands
3. For direct contact with pt, nurse or care provider should wear a gown and gloves.
4. Notify receiving area
Common Microorganisms which require Airborne Contact Precautions :
1. Measles (Rubeola)
2. Tuberculosis (TB)
3. Chicken Pox (Varicella-Zoster virus)
4. Herpes Zoster (Shingles) disseminated
Droplet Contact Precautions:
Before Entering:
1. Wash Hands
2. DON Mask and Eye Protection
3. DON Gown then Gloves
Before Leaving Pt's Room:
1. Remove gloves then gown
2. Wash Hands
3. Remove eye protection and mask
4. Wash Hands
Droplet Contact Precautions Transporting patient:
1. Pt must perform hand hygeine
2. Pt must wear a surgical or procedure mask and clean gown
3. For direct contact with pt, nurse or care provider should wear a gown and gloves.
4. Notify receiving area
Common Microorganisms which require Droplet Contact Precautions :
1. Influenza (Flu)
2. Viral Respiratory tract infections (adenovirus, parainfluenza, rhinovirus, RSV)
3. Streptococcus group A pharyngitis, pneumonia, scarlet fever
4. Neisseria meningitidis invasive infections
5. H. Influenzae type b invasive infections
6. Pertussis
7. Rubella
8. Mumps
Strict isolation is:
Rules:
used to prevent the transmission of all highly communicable diseases that are spread by both, contact or airborne routes of transmission. Examples of such diseases are chickenpox and rabies
(1) Visitors must report to the nurses' station before entering the room.
(2) Door must be kept closed.
(3) Gowns must be worn by all persons entering the room.
(4) Masks must be worn by all persons entering the room.
(5) Hands must be washed on entering and leaving the room.
(6) Gloves must be worn by all persons entering the room.
(7) Articles must be discarded or wrapped before being sent to Central Supply for disinfection or sterilization.
Respiratory isolation is:
Rules
used to prevent transmission of organisms by means of droplets that are sneezed or breathed into the environment. Examples of such diseases are influenza and tuberculosis
(1) Visitors must report to the nurses' station before entering the room.
(2) Door must be kept closed.
(3) Gowns are not necessary.
(4) Masks must be worn by any person entering the room unless that person is not susceptible to the disease.
(5) Hands must be washed on entering and leaving the room.
(6) Gloves are not necessary.
(7) Articles contaminated with secretions must be disinfected.
Protective isolation is:
Rules:
used to prevent contact between potentially pathogenic microorganisms and uninfected persons who have seriously impaired resistance. Patients with certain diseases, such as leukemia, who are on certain therapeutic regimens are significantly more susceptible to infections
(1) Visitors must report to the nurses' station before entering the room.
(2) Door must be kept closed.
(3) Gowns must be worn by all persons entering the room.
(4) Masks must be worn by all persons entering the room.
(5) Hands must be washed on entering and leaving the room.
(6) Gloves must be worn by all persons having direct contact with the patient.
(7) Articles must be handled according to local SOP.
Enteric precautions are:
Rules:
used to control diseases that can be transmitted through direct or indirect oral contact with infected feces or contaminated articles. Transmission of infection depends on ingestion of the pathogen. Examples of diseases requiring enteric precautions are dysentery and hepatitis.
(1) Visitors must report to the nurses' station before entering the room.
(2) Gowns must be worn by all persons having direct contact with the patient.
(3) Masks are not necessary.
(4) Gloves must be worn by all persons having direct contact with the patient or with articles contaminated with fecal material.
(5) Special precautions are necessary for articles contaminated with urine and feces. Articles must be disinfected or discarded
Wound and skin precautions are:
Rules:
used to prevent the spread of microorganisms found in infected wounds (including burns and open sores) and contact with wounds and heavily contaminated articles. Conditions requiring these precautions include infected burns, infected wounds, and infections with large amounts of purulent discharge. Diseases that may require wound and skin precautions include herpes, impetigo, and ringworm.
(1) Visitors must report to the nurses' station before entering the room.
(2) Gowns must be worn by all persons having direct contact with the infected wound.
(3) Masks are not necessary except during dressing changes.
(4) Gloves must be worn by all persons having direct contact with the infected area.
(5) Special precautions are necessary for instruments, dressings, and linens.
CAUTION: Only hospital personnel who have been vaccinated with poliomyelitis vaccine should have direct contact with patients who have active poliomyelitis.
Blood precautions are:
Rules:
used to prevent acquisition of infection by patients and personnel from contact with blood or items contaminated with blood. Examples of diseases that require blood precautions (refer to Lesson 1) are HBV and HIV/AIDS
Secretion precautions-lesions are:
used to prevent acquisition of infection by personnel and patients from direct contact with wounds and secretion-contaminated articles. Some examples of diseases requiring these precautions are conjunctivitis, gonorrhea, and syphilis
Secretion precautions-oral are:
used to prevent acquisition of infection by personnel from direct contact with oral secretions. Some examples of diseases requiring these precautions are herpes areolas and scarlet fever.
Excretion precautions are:
used to prevent acquisition of infection by personnel and patients from direct contact with fecal excretions. Some examples of diseases requiring these precautions are poliomyelitis and staphylococcal food poisoning.
If it's not one of these 4 diseases and you know it's HIGHLY contagious, it's probably droplet, so know the 4 airborne are!
(think: My Chicken Has TB)
measles
chicken pox
Herpes zoster aka shingles
TB
airborne precautions, room considerations
Remember: Private room or cohort w/ negative pressure w/ 6 - 12 air exchange/hr AND MASK.
N95
mask for TB.
Droplet precautions
SSS PPP IDER MMM AN
S
= Sepsis
S
= Scarlet Fever
S
= Streptococcal Pharyngitis
P
= Paravirus B19
P
= Pneumonia
P
= Pertussis
I
= Influenza
D
= Diptheria (Pharyngeal)
E
= Epiglottitis
R
= Rubella
M
= Mumps
M
= Meningitis
M
= Mycoplasma or Meningeal Pneumonia
AN
= Adenovirus
CONTACT precautions
MRS WEE
M
= Multidrug Resistant Organism
R
= Respiratory Infection
S
= Skin Infections
W
= Wound Infections
E
= Enteric Infection (Clostridium Difficile)
E
= Eye Infections (Conjunctivitis)
SKIN Infections:
V CHIPS
V-CHIPS
V
= Varicella
C
= Cutaneous Diptheria
H
= Herepes Zoster
I
= Impetigo
P
= Pediculosis
S
= Scabies
AIRBORNE PRECAUTION:
<5 microns
Private room with closed door
negative pressure room/ 6-12 exchange/hr
PPE: N95, Hepa Filter
DSE: (Remember MTV Hz)
Measle
TB/ TB suspect
Varicella
Herpes Zoster
SARS
DROPLET PRECAUTION:
>5 microns
Private room
YES to cohort, 3ft separation
PPE: Surgical Mask
DSE: (Remember "Dropletism")
Diptheria
Rubella
Oral Pharyngitis
Pertussis/ Pneumonia
Legionnaire's Disease
Erythema infectiosum (5th disease) -contagious when no rash
Tonsilitis
Influenza
Scarlet Fever
Mumps/ Meningitis
CONTACT PRECAUTION:
Private room
YES to cohort, 3ft separation
Secretions: skin wounds, eyes, nose, ears
Patient has own BP/Stet equipment
PPE: Gloves and Gown
DSE: RSV, MRSA, VRSA, VRE, CDAD, STD, Conjunctivitis, Impetigo
ENTERIC PRECAUTION:
Private room with bathroom facility
YES to cohort
PPE: Gloves and Gown
DSE: Hep A, Shigella, Salmonella, Norwalk virus (improper/ contaminated food)
Crytosporidiosis, Gardiasis (common in day care/ children)
NEUTROPENIC PRECAUTION:
Private room
PPE: Mask
DSE: Chemo/ Cancer patients, AIDS/HIV, Major burns/ surgery,
SLE, Transplant patient taking 4C's (Cellcept, Corticoidsteroids, Cytoxan, Cyclosporin)
...
order in which the nurse should remove personal protective equipment(ppe)
gloves,
goggles
gown
mask
note it's in alpha order
Diseases requiring enteric precautions
C-diff
Dysentery from infectious cause
Hepatitis A
Students also viewed
Contact, droplet, and airborne precautions./PPE
12 terms
NCLEX Precautions review; standard, contact, airbo…
27 terms
ATI Infection Control RN Video
5 terms
Safety and Infection Control NCLEX Questions
20 terms
Sets found in the same folder
Fluid, Electrolyte and Acid-base imbalances
90 terms
NCLEX Procedures
25 terms
Unit 3 respiratory system diseases (risk factors)
9 terms
Uworld leadership
48 terms
Other sets by this creator
Isolation Precautions Kaplan NCLEX
52 terms
301 Final new slides
196 terms
drug uses
26 terms
300 Exam 3 breast/genitalia
335 terms
Verified questions
chemistry
The potassium salt of benzoic acid, potassium benzoate $\left(\mathrm{KC}_7 \mathrm{H}_5 \mathrm{O}_2\right)$, can be made by the action of potassium permanganate on toluene $\left(\mathrm{C}_7 \mathrm{H}_8\right)$ as follows. $$ \mathrm{C}_7 \mathrm{H}_8+2 \mathrm{KMnO}_4 \longrightarrow \mathrm{KC}_7 \mathrm{H}_5 \mathrm{O}_2+2 \mathrm{MnO}_2+\mathrm{KOH}+\mathrm{H}_2 \mathrm{O} $$ If the yield of potassium benzoate cannot realistically be expected to be more than $71 \%$, what is the minimum number of grams of toluene needed to produce $11.5 \mathrm{~g}$ of potassium benzoate?
engineering
A cylinder/piston arrangement contains 10 g ammonia at 20°$^{\circ} \mathrm{C}$ with a volume of 1 L. There are some stops, so if the piston is at the stops, the volume is 1.4 L. The ammonia is now heated to 200$^{\circ} \mathrm{C}$ by a 240$^{\circ} \mathrm{C}$ source. The piston and cylinder are made of 0.5 kg aluminum, and assume that the mass has the same temperature as the ammonia at any time. Find the total heat transfer and the total entropy generation.
chemistry
Relate the formation of metamorphic rocks to plate tectonics. Would you expect to find metamorphic rocks at all three types of plate boundaries? Why or why not?
biology
What is the difference between an organism's habitat and its ecological niche?
Recommended textbook solutions
Clinical Reasoning Cases in Nursing
7th Edition
•
ISBN: 9780323527361
Julie S Snyder, Mariann M Harding
2,512 solutions
Pharmacology and the Nursing Process
7th Edition
•
ISBN: 9780323087896
(1 more)
Julie S Snyder, Linda Lilley, Shelly Collins
388 solutions
Medical Assisting Review: Passing The CMA, RMA, and CCMA Exams
7th Edition
•
ISBN: 9781266365010
Jahangir Moini
1,975 solutions
Nutrition: Concepts and Controversies
15th Edition
•
ISBN: 9781337906371
(1 more)
Eleanor Noss Whitney, Ellie Whitney, Frances Sizer
342 solutions