Special Edition on Infection Prevention & Control | Page 26

Addressing the hospital environment and animal sectors can reduce human exposure of microbes and pathogens, and human-focused interventions can reduce colonization risk.” and environmental fomites, thereby increasing the indirect transmission of MDROs.” Healthcare workers represent another facet of the One Health framework as it applies to HAI prevention and control, since studies have indicated up to 40 percent of HAIs may be spread by contaminated healthcare worker hands—hands that were contaminated either from direct contact with infected or colonized patients, or from their environment. Even without direct patient contact, healthcare workers can serve as vectors and spread pathogens between environmental surfaces throughout the hospital. It is also critical to include the many daily visitors to hospitals who contribute to the microbial composition of the hospital environment. Regarding interventions to reduce exposure, the researchers acknowledge, “The challenge of complex microbial and pathogen inputs from community sources to the hospital environment—and the pathogen dynamics among individuals who are treated, visit, and work within in this setting—requires an integrative perspective to design interventions to reduce the risk of human exposure, colonization, and infection. Therefore, focusing on individuals by themselves or a single type of MDRO may provide incomplete answers. Microbes, including pathogens, circulate between the hospital environment and the larger community, with individuals and animals serving as mechanical vectors. Most interventions are designed to target only one sector, but multimodal strategies may be more successful to break this cyclic feedback loop. Addressing the hospital environment and animal sectors can reduce human exposure of microbes and pathogens, and human-focused interventions can reduce colonization risk.” Dalton, et al. (2020) report on the interventions from their literature review that can boost IP&C, and include: ● Hospital interventions As the researchers explain, “Interventions targeted at the environmental sector have been shown to have downstream benefits on the microbial carriage and colonization of humans.” From their literature search, Dalton, et al. (2020) noted interventions targeting the hospital environment focused on manual cleaning and disinfection protocols as well as “no-touch” decolonization technologies and isolation through facility or administrative design or through other engineering controls. ● Human interventions The researchers report that human-centered interventions evaluated in the literature focused primarily on hygiene, including patient decolonization, healthcare personnel hand hygiene, and wearable-fomite decontamination. They also allude to the adoption of human factors engineering, a discipline that studies the capabilities and limitations of humans and the design of devices and systems for improved performance. As Dalton, et al. (2020) explain, “In the context of hospital infection control, this deals with designing spaces and opportunities for individuals to avoid exposure and colonization to pathogens, a form of administrative control. This has the potential to identify major underlying causes and contributors to a problem. It goes beyond education and training, which are often the focus of infection prevention interventions, to modify an individual’s context so that default decisions align with healthy and desired actions. It utilizes environmental design, such as handwashing or antiseptic alcohol stations at the exits of patient rooms and one-way human traffic flows, in a way that minimizes exposure to healthcare workers and other patients to effect downstream reductions in the contamination of other hospital surfaces and individuals.” ● Animal interventions As the researchers explain, “Just as animals have not been extensively examined in their role as vectors of pathogens and other microbes, there are also few studies on interventions in animals in either a hospital or community setting. Just as intervention programs focus on hand hygiene protocols in HCW because of their role as vectors of hospital-associated pathogen transmission between patients and the hospital environment, therapy and service animals may also fill a similar niche, but infection control programs that target animals in healthcare settings are lacking. There are recommended guidelines for animals entering into the hospital environment (service animals, therapy animals, personal pet visitations), but the evidence of the recommended protocols’ effectiveness is based largely on extrapolation from human data and many recommended interventions have not been validated in animals.” The interweaving of the hospital environment, the patients who are treated there, the individuals who work there, and the people and animals that visit, creates a microbial ecosystem that can be evaluated and treated holistically, Dalton says. As she and her co-authors note, “It has been shown that the most effective intervention programs are multi-modal and designed to minimize individual pathogen exposure before such exposure progresses to colonization and infection. However, environmental decontamination and human hygiene practices decrease but do not eliminate the risk of colonization in other individuals and HAI rates seen in the hospital. A One Health approach may assist in the development of novel research and multi-modal intervention approaches by considering the relationship between the patient, the HCWs, and the hospital environment, and the role of the community.” When it comes to how to integrate the One Health framework into HAI prevention, Dalton says, “The most practical recommendation I can put forth is emphasizing the need for advisory boards whose members can lend assistance in decision-making in regard to infection prevention and control. And make the boards as diverse as possible, including infection preventionists, epidemiologists and representatives from various departments in the hospital and other specialties outside the hospital, bringing together a variety of viewpoints and leveraging them in the common goal of patient, visitor and healthcare worker safety.” Reference: Dalton KR, Rock C, Carroll KC, and Davis MF. One Health in hospitals: how understanding the dynamics of people, animals, and the hospital built-environment can be used to better inform interventions for antimicrobial-resistant Gram-positive infections. Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control. Vol. 9, No. 78. June 1, 2020. 26 IP&C Special Edition June 2020 • www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com