/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111124_Arthrex_TB-378x82.jpg

Subscriptions

Advertising

Resources

About Us

Contact Us

Create An Account Forgot Your Password?
Trouble logging in or creating an account? click here
Home This Month E-Weekly Newsletter Building a Facility Article Archive Second Opinions
Search:
Benchmarking
General Surgery
Accrediting/Quality
Anesthesia
Code/Bill/Reimburse
Building/Renovating
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111202_Arthrex_LB-154x100.jpg
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20110502_Provista_LB-154x100.gif
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111003_Ansell_LB-154x100.gif
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111226_Soma_LB-154x100.gif
Outpatient Surgery E-Weekly

Can Protein-Free Diets Reduce Surgical Complications?

Restricting proteins and amino acids from patients' diets in the days leading up to surgery may lower complication risks, say researchers at the Har...

Robotic Surgery Patients May Have Unrealistic Expectations

Men expecting quicker returns to physical activity after robotic prostate surgery may have unrealistic expectations for the procedure, according to ...

Making the Most of a Staffing Dollar

"Today more than ever, you need to be certain you're getting your money's worth for every minute your staff are on the clock," says Donna Ferguson, ...

Home > News > March, 2010

Government Inspections Find Infection Control Practices "Suboptimal" at ASCs

Two-thirds of surgery centers surveyed were cited for at least 1 lapse.

Published: March 26, 2010
Categories: Infection Control, News

Results are in from the first round of government inspections of infection control practices at ASCs and the news is not good: About two-thirds of the 68 surgery centers surveyed had at least 1 documented lapse in infection control, and 18% had lapses in 3 or more of the 5 categories assessed by surveyors from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Improper hand hygiene, gloving, injection safety and equipment reprocessing were among the "suboptimal" practices discovered during the pilot round of infection control surveys conducted in 2008, according to findings presented at the International Conference on Healthcare-Associated Infections.

The improper reuse of single-use devices appears to have been a recurring problem unearthed during the surveys, which were conducted in Maryland, North Carolina and Oklahoma from June to October 2008. The findings, broken down in Table 1, show facilities were cited for using single-dose medication vials, spring-loaded lancing penlets for blood glucose monitoring and other single-use devices, such as bite blocks, for multiple patients. Other examples of lapses were failure to wash hands after contact with body fluids and failure to properly clean OR surfaces after procedures.

Table 1

The researchers, led by Melissa Schaefer, MD, of the CDC's Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, found no statistically significant association between infection control lapses and the volume of procedures performed at an ASC or a particular facility type. Based on the findings, they conclude that "adherence to infection control in this sample of ASCs was suboptimal."

Recently, CMS collaborated with the CDC to pilot a new audit tool to assess adherence to infection control as part of the inspection process. The first round of CMS/CDC surveys examined in this study has since been expanded nationwide with funding from the 2009 federal economic stimulus package. The researchers encourage ASCs to review the audit tool surveyors are using and consult with evidence-based guidelines and requirements to ensure they're complying with proper infection control practices.

OSM has guidance on how to ace your CMS infection control survey here and here.

Irene Tsikitas

Table 1 courtesy of "Multi-State Infection Control Assessment of Ambulatory Surgical Centers, 2008" by Schaefer, et al.

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.


Also in the News...

Was This Orthopedic Surgeon Too Slow, or Just Conscientious?

Drunken Night Out Costs Pediatric RN His Job

Doctor Loses License for Touching Anesthetized Patients' Breasts

Automatic Meal-Break Deductions

Paper Clip Dentist Sentenced to Year in Jail

Gynecologists Offering Breast Augmentation and Ophthalmologists Doing Liposuction

Tragic Error: Remove Monitoring Equipment From Patient Given High Doses of Pain Meds

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.

Already have an account? Please sign in:
Email Address:
Password:
PRODUCT & SERVICE RESOURCES
Did You See This?
A showcase of products and services geared to make your facility better.

Architects' Showcase
Is a beautiful, efficient new facility in your future?
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111111_CareFusion_AR-300x250.jpg
Other Articles That May Interest You
Study Finds End-Of-Life Surgery Common
Researchers raise debate over surgical intervention vs. discretion.
N.J. Insurer Prevails in Payment Recoup Lawsuit
Appeals court denies providers' contract dispute over investigational pain procedure.
Surgeon Blames Hospital for Alleged Dirty Instruments
Orthopod claims money earmarked for new construction jeopardized infection control practices.