Healthcare Hygiene magazine April 2020 | Page 43

or $3,400 for every $10,000 they make. Let’s look at the math as it applies to a hypothetical EVS department with 50 frontline workers averaging $30,000 an- nually: 34 percent of $30,000 = $10,200 Using the Achievers data (which states that only 21 percent of employees are engaged), we can calculate that around 29 of those 50 employees are disengaged and complacent in their work. That means that employee compla- cency cost your department $295,800 (29x$10,200) out of a labor budget of $1.5 million If 90 percent of your staff were fully engaged, the cost of complacency drops to just $51,000 for a savings of $244,800. But much greater than the financial impact of complacency in the EVS department is the cost in human lives. The stakes are too high to allow the rooms of residents or patients to be cleaned by a person who is not properly educated and engaged. The EVS professional must be properly compensated, regarded as a part of the facility’s multi-modal infection prevention program, be well trained in the nuances of cleaning and disinfection, allotted the time to do the necessary tasks, equipped with the best-in-class tools to clean and disinfect surfaces and educated about the prevention and transmission of disease. chosen and respected by those they work alongside of. In short, a fully engaged cleaning professional. A closing thought: One well-trained, well-equipped, engaged certified environmental services technician, given the proper tools and an adequate amount of time to clean and disinfect a patient’s room can prevent more infections than a room full of doctors can cure.  J. Darrel Hicks, BA, MREH, CHESP, is the owner/principal of Darrel Hicks, LLC and the author of the book Infection Prevention for Dummies. He is also a board member and acting president of the Healthcare Surfaces Institute. References: 1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Hospital Utilization (in non-Federal short stay hospitals), Hospital Inpatient Care-Number of Discharges; Procedures Performed, May 14, 2015; http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/hospital.htm 2. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). Healthcare-Associated Infections Greatly Increase the Cost of Hospital Stays. AHRQ News and Numbers, August 25, 2010; http://archive.ahrq.gov/news/newsroom/news- and-numbers/082510.html The Learning Objectives for Certifying your Cleaning Professionals (CPs) • Define infection prevention as environmental services’ No. 1 job • Equip the front-line cleaning professional (CP) with knowledge of infection prevention as it relates to their daily tasks • Analyze the CP’s role in patient satisfaction • Support the CP with practical “how to” tips for cleaning and disinfecting • Introduce cleaning and disinfect- ing strategies that effectively break the chain of infection • Convert the CP into a certified environmental services technician An educated, engaged and certified EVS tech will be viewed as a knowledge- able professional working amongst other healthcare professionals who are certified or registered in their field. Knowledge leads the environmental services worker to be proud of the profession they have www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com • april 2020 43