Healthcare Hygiene magazine April 2020 | Page 25

source of harm to our patients and puts us at increased risk for COVID-19 infiltration. To cause a nosocomial outbreak, it will take just one patient with occult COVID-19 who is hospitalized, tests negative for influenza virus, and is taken off precautions despite persistent respiratory symptoms. Or just one visitor with COVID-19 and mild respiratory symptoms who is permitted free access to the hospital because it does not have an active screening and exclusion policy for visitors with respiratory tract symptoms. Or just one infected healthcare worker who decides to soldier through a shift despite a sore throat and runny nose.” Experts are placing renewed emphasis on common-sense and evidence-based practices, including respiratory hygiene and placing restrictions on patients, visitors, and healthcare workers with even mild symptoms of upper respiratory tract infection. Klompas (2020) adds, “Potential policies to consider include the following: 1) screening all visitors for any respiratory symptoms that may be related to a virus, including fever, myalgias, pharyngitis, rhinorrhea, and cough, and excluding them from visiting until they are better; 2) restricting healthcare workers from working if they have any upper respiratory tract symptoms, even in the absence of fever; and 3) screening all patients, testing for all respiratory viruses (including SARS-CoV-2) in those with positive screening results regardless of illness severity, and using precautions (single rooms, contact precautions, droplet precautions, and eye protection) for patients with respiratory syndromes for the duration of their symptoms regardless of viral test results. A collateral benefit is that if a patient is subsequently diagnosed with COVID-19, staff who used these precautions will be considered minimally exposed and will be able to continue working. None of these measures will be easy. Restricting visitors will be psychologically difficult for patients and loved ones, maintaining respiratory precautions for the duration of patients’ symptoms will strain supplies in all hospitals and bed capacity in hospitals that depend on shared rooms, and preventing health care providers with mild illness from working will compromise staffing. But if we are frank about the morbidity and mortality of all respiratory viruses, including SARS-CoV-2, this is the best thing we can do for our patients and colleagues regardless of COVID-19.” Transmission Potential of SARS-CoV-2 in Viral Shedding From left, Mark Rupp, MD, chief of infectious diseases, and John Lowe, PhD, UNMC assistant vice chancellor for inter-professional health security training and education www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com • april 2020 Scientists from UNMC and Nebraska Medicine spoke Sunday on a recently published study, describing patterns of transmission in COVID-19. The study did provide additional evidence of SARS-CoV-2 environmental contamination in COVID-19 patient-care areas, finding levels of genetic ma- terial from the COVID-19 virus contamination on commonly used surfaces, in the air of rooms of COVID-19 patients and in hallways outside of rooms. “We are being very careful in the care of patients with COVID-19 or patients suspected to have COVID-19, and the study doesn’t change very much in the precautions that people should take,” says Mark Rupp, MD, chief of the UNMC Division of Infectious Diseases. Rupp says that there was widespread contamination within the patient-care environment and evidence of the genetic material from the virus could be recovered in some air samples, confirming the importance of disinfecting the patient-care environment, further adding that COVID-19 transmission seems to be much like influenza and not like airborne diseases such as chicken pox or measles. He added that influenza virus can also sometimes be found in the air in patient rooms particularly associated with aerosol generating procedures — such as intubation or bronchoscopy. “It doesn’t appear to spread like classic, airborne-spread viruses,” he says. “We don’t have evidence at this point that COVID-19 would spread in such a fashion, so we need to continue to emphasize the known methods of transmission and the ways to combat such transmission. We are caring for patients known or suspected to have COVID-19 with special precautions, and we recently introduced universal mask use for all personnel in patient-care areas. “ John Lowe, PhD, co-author of the study and vice chancellor for interprofessional health security training and education, says the study was performed to investigate how the virus was spread so as to protect healthcare workers. “We were not incredibly surprised by any of the results we found,” he says. “We did confirm the presence of the genetic material from the virus throughout the environment on what we refer to as high-touch surfaces or surfaces of interest — toilets, cell phones, personal items, countertops, doorknobs. We also did identify a number of samples that detected the virus genes in the air, which confirmed for us the value in prioritizing respiratory protection when possible and prioritizing negative-pressure environments to provide direct patient care to these individuals.” “Our team was already taking precautions with the initial patients we cared for,” says James Lawler, MD, co-author of the report, an infectious diseases expert and a director of the Global Center for Health Security at UNMC. “This report reinforces our suspicions. It’s why we have maintained COVID patients in well-equipped rooms and will continue to make efforts to do so — even with an increase in the number of patients. Our healthcare workers providing care will be equipped with the appropriate level of personal protective equipment. Obviously, more research is required to be able to fully characterize environmental risk.” “Studies like these are needed to understand proper precautions for healthcare workers, first responders and others who care for the ill and are needed to combat this pandemic,” says Joshua Santarpia, PhD, co-author of the 25