Special Edition on Sterile Processing Imperatives Special Edition- Sterile Processing Imperatives | Page 20

I believe it’s imperative to have infection preventionists, as well as sterile processing and perioperative managers and directors spend a day in each other’s shoes.” properly trained and certified. It’s the same in the sterile processing department; certified technicians understand that a single-use instrument or cleaning tool, as dictated in the instructions for use, can only be used once. They understand that they need to always wash their hands after they remove their gloves. They understand these protocols because they have been professionally trained and understand the evidence.   HHM What can be done to further break down barriers to implementation science in the sterile processing department?   CO: I believe it’s imperative to have infection preven- tionists, as well as sterile processing and perioperative managers and directors spend a day in each other’s shoes. We know people are very busy, but it’s critical to have an infection preventionist spend time in the sterile processing department to observe several scopes being processed to see how difficult and time-consuming it is. They would understand how challenging it can be to follow the IFUs to the letter.  I also think that if sterile processing technicians would watch procedures in the operating room, it wouldn’t take long for them to realize how complex surgical services is. They could also imagine the patient on the table as being their loved one, and would they want a scope or an instrument used on them if it weren’t decontaminated, cleaned, disinfected, sterilized and packaged correctly? Technicians must understand that a scope could be in the operating room for three or four hours, and in that time, is it being reused, is it being wiped down, is it getting pre-cleaned, and is it getting handled roughly? That’s why you are inspecting it, because you don’t know what happened behind those closed doors in the operating room the last time it was used. So, if they can observe for themselves, they will understand why it matters, and I think we could take a giant leap forward in terms of interdepartmental collaboration and resource allocation. I think the hospital administrator should spend a day in the surgical services and sterile processing departments as well. It would be advantageous to all if there was some shadowing being conducted.    Reference: Geerligs L, Rankin NM, Shepherd HL and Butow P. Hospital-based interventions: a systematic review of staff-reported barriers and facilitators to implementation processes. Implementation Science. Vol. 13, No. 36. Feb. 23, 2018. 20 In COVID-19 Patients, Contaminated Reusable Bronchoscopes Could Cause Secondary Infections and Higher Mortality Rates At a time when the COVID-19 pandemic is compli- cating care for critically ill patients, researchers are now calling attention to secondary infections caused by contaminated reusable bronchoscopes. As Ofstead and Hopkins, et al. (2020) explain, “During the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, critically ill patients may require therapeutic bronchoscopy or sample collection via bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), which involves using a bronchoscope to flush lungs with saline solution. Results of BAL assays are used to make clinical decisions that may impact outcomes. Clinicians have reported that COVID-19 patients had bacterial and fungal pulmonary coinfections with potential pathogens including Escherichia, Salmonella, Pseudomonas, and Stenotrophomonas.” Two years ago, researchers in Wuhan City, China identified Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in 55.55 percent of BAL samples. As the researchers explain, the source was the channel of an improperly reprocessed bronchoscope, and the pseudo-outbreak involved 25 asymptomatic patients undergoing treatment for tuberculosis and other infections. Reprocessing and hand hygiene deficiencies were identified. In the U.S., epidemiologist Cori Ofstead, MSPH, and her team of researchers have identified numerous nosocomial outbreaks and pseudo-outbreaks which have been linked to inadequately reprocessed bronchoscopes. In their prospective studies which evaluated effectiveness of bronchoscope reprocessing in five U.S. hospitals in the United States, they detected microbial growth on 23 (65.7 percent) of 35 bron- choscopes. They report, “Ten (28.6 percent) bronchoscopes Sterile Processing Imperatives 2020 • www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com