Protecting Patients and Stopping Outbreaks
Your patients can get infections when receiving healthcare, called healthcare-associated infections (HAIs). HAIs are commonly caused by antibiotic-resistant pathogens (germs), which may lead to sepsis or death. People can also get antibiotic-resistant infections in their community, for example, gonorrhea, tuberculosis (TB), or foodborne infections.
Take the following actions to help protect your patients and people in the community from antibiotic-resistant infections.
Help Prevent Infections and their Spread
- Follow infection prevention and control guidelines:
- Alert the receiving facility when you transfer a patient with an antibiotic-resistant infection, and ask colleagues to use an infection control transfer form
- Ask patients if they have recently received care in another facility or traveled to another country
- Ensure your patients receive recommended vaccines, and talk to them and their families about:
- Preventing infections
- Keeping scrapes and wounds clean
- Managing chronic conditions
- Seeking medical care when an infection is not getting better
- Understanding when antibiotics are needed
Improve Antibiotic Prescribing
- Follow clinical guidelines and core elements:
- Consider community-acquired pneumonia for fungal infections in certain U.S. areas, for example:
- Valley fever (coccidioidomycosis)
- Histoplasmosis
- Blastomycosis
- Optimize TB therapy: Treatment for TB Disease
- Watch for signs of sepsis: Clinical Resources and Guidelines
Be Alert and Take Action
- Monitor infections, including resistant infections, in your facility, and be aware of antibiotic resistance patterns in your facility and community
- Ask the lab to notify you immediately when resistant infections are identified in your patients
- Inform patients and families of an antibiotic-resistant infection
- Know when to report treatment failures to a public health department
- For example, report gonorrhea isolates with decreased cephalosporin susceptibility or clinical treatment failure to CDC through your state or local public health authority
- Consider the communities you serve in regards to common infections, including resistant infections
- For example, gonorrhea and staph can be concentrated in specific geographic locations and communities
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