Healthcare Hygiene magazine March 2020 | Page 33

sound implausible, but those situations arise much too often and are a result of a lack of communication, cooperation, and collaboration. Coincidentally, two study sites, one new and another with a significant addition of a 17-story building, did not include a seat at the table for EVS leaders to discuss the impact these initiatives would place on cleaning and disinfection. Whether intentional or a gross oversight due to a proliferation of a silo mentality is unknown. The new building cited in the gap analysis did not include consideration or the need for added dock space, waste-stream support, EVS storage, clean utility, or soiled utility rooms, or types of surfaces fabrics and equipment that could exist and function in a healthcare environment and reasonably cleaned and disinfected. Additionally, although necessary for clinical staff support, no allocation of space for scrub-dispensing equipment was considered nor available after the build, further burdening the labor budget for non-essential patient-care tasks. The silo actions had a vital and negative impact on staffing and resources in EVS. They required significant time and effort by many departments to find creative ways to work around diminished space and lack of ready resources such as tools, equipment, and storage while failing to provide additional funding to meet the needs of many departments. At the same time, EVS and other departments experienced labor issues necessitated by transportation and time requirements due to the demand for moving both people and assets from one point to another. Multiple analysis surveys addressed different impacts on EVS, and clinical staff directly responsible for patients. A lack of communication and understanding of task assignments was cited numerous times in the surveys. Failures to communicate between discipline responsibilities for what needed cleaning and who was responsible for cleaning, and when cleaning was required. Without a definite responsibility matrix, dirty equipment waited for the responsible party to clean, disinfect, and remove it. Without a distinct model, EVS ultimately inherits the responsibility of ensuring every item, in the room, is processed. CLICK The project advisors assigned TO VIEW to the study sites observed two measurements of time: Patient Progression ➊ Wheels out to wheels in (a term to indicate when a patient leaves a room, to when another can come in), often referred to as room turnover time ➋ A more widely recognized and accepted measurement relative to EVS, room turnover time, meaning the time it takes to process a discharged room. Minimal room turnover time was significantly evident and emphasized for both patient-room discharge and isolation room cleaning, as well as OR in-between case cleaning and end-of-day terminal cleaning in the OR. Numerous surveys indicated continual pressure to reduce processing time which resulted in undue influence upon staff to incompletely fulfill the necessary tasks that provide hygienic spaces for patients. Infection preventionists recognize the practice is unsafe and indicated they strive to support the needs of www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com • march 2020 EVS in adequately fulfilling their duties and responsibilities to both patients and nursing staff. Improved Outcomes Through the implementation of the ESOP program, executive-level leadership was engaged immediately through an invitation to join as an executive sponsor. Minimal time is requested to invest in the overall project, except for the necessary project kickoff and post-project report. The executive sponsors participate in the program whenever they wish and when influence is required, or deemed necessary, to remove roadblocks encountered or facilitate collaboration and resource allocation. Communication within the multidisciplinary team incorporates a simple template that allows the departments a method and means to validate effective communication, report changes, monitor infection rates, and gain collabora- tion. Value analysis teams, if not already functioning, are set in place that allow regular and thoughtful communication. And involvement in projects and purchasing of products or services are performed by a team of vested stakeholders. The value analysis CLICK teams ensure that all purchases meet TO VIEW the requirements of the facility, as well as proper infection prevention Cleaning Accountability and environmental service cleaning and disinfection guidelines. Caroline Haggerty and Sara Townsend, from PennMed- icine and Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, respectively, enacted a “Who Cleans What, How, and When” program. The program facilitated education and buy-in to ensure that everyone was clear on the manufacturers’ instructions for use (IFU). The IFUs, proper cleaning and disinfection, coupled with a responsibility matrix and utilization of AHE’s Certified Surgical Cleaning Technician certification training (CSCT), and Certificate of Mastery of Infection Prevention (CMIP), along with a capstone project, ensured each item was adequately cared for to provide the best patient care. Training – Evidenced Based Certification Present State There was a variety of programs in place for both in-house (hospital managed) and contractor (outsourced) training; however, standardized resources across facilities lacked the requisite methods and means to fulfill obligations and the equipment varied. The content of the existing programs typically was outdated to current industry standards and the latest practice guidance by the authorities having jurisdiction. Policies were outdated, including the training materials and resources on-hand. In many cases, the passion and desire to serve were evident, yet the tools, knowledge, availability, or time, and financial support was lacking. Improved Outcomes As introduced last month, the Association Healthcare Environment (AHE) (https://www.ahe.org) was available to program participants to provide significant resources. Resources included instructor-lead train the trainer programs with world-class content. The AHE was ready to deliver educational formats for audiences to make an immediate 33