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NEW: Health Alert Network (HAN) No. 383 - CDC/FDA Health Update about the Immediate Need for Healthcare Facilities to Review Procedures for Cleaning, Disinfecting, and Sterilizing Reusable Medical Devices
On September 11, 2015, CDC issued HAN 00382 alerting healthcare providers and facilities about the public health need to properly maintain, clean, and disinfect or sterilize reusable medical devices. Recent infection control lapses due to non-compliance with recommended reprocessing procedures highlight a critical gap in patient safety. Healthcare facilities (e.g., hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers, clinics, and doctors’ offices) that utilize reusable medical devices are urged to immediately review current reprocessing practices at their facility to ensure they (1) are complying with all steps as directed by the device manufacturers, and (2) have in place appropriate policies and procedures that are consistent with current standards and guidelines. After considering feedback from vendors that perform servicing and repair of reusable medical devices, we are amending HAN Advisory 382 to remove the following sentence: “If healthcare facilities contract maintenance and repair of these devices to third-party vendors, healthcare facilities should verify that these vendors are approved or certified by the manufacturer to provide those services.” We are making this change because there are currently no formal standardized programs or processes through which all manufacturers certify third-party vendors. We are also further clarifying that healthcare facilities which hire contractors to perform device reprocessing should verify that the contractor has an appropriate training program (i.e., consistent with what would be required in the healthcare facility) and that the training program includes the specific devices used by the healthcare facility.
Categories: CDC News
NEW: Health Alert Network (HAN) No. 383 - CDC/FDA Health Update about the Immediate Need for Healthcare Facilities to Review Procedures for Cleaning, Disinfecting, and Sterilizing Reusable Medical Devices
On September 11, 2015, CDC issued HAN 00382 alerting healthcare providers and facilities about the public health need to properly maintain, clean, and disinfect or sterilize reusable medical devices. Recent infection control lapses due to non-compliance with recommended reprocessing procedures highlight a critical gap in patient safety. Healthcare facilities (e.g., hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers, clinics, and doctors’ offices) that utilize reusable medical devices are urged to immediately review current reprocessing practices at their facility to ensure they (1) are complying with all steps as directed by the device manufacturers, and (2) have in place appropriate policies and procedures that are consistent with current standards and guidelines. After considering feedback from vendors that perform servicing and repair of reusable medical devices, we are amending HAN Advisory 382 to remove the following sentence: “If healthcare facilities contract maintenance and repair of these devices to third-party vendors, healthcare facilities should verify that these vendors are approved or certified by the manufacturer to provide those services.” We are making this change because there are currently no formal standardized programs or processes through which all manufacturers certify third-party vendors. We are also further clarifying that healthcare facilities which hire contractors to perform device reprocessing should verify that the contractor has an appropriate training program (i.e., consistent with what would be required in the healthcare facility) and that the training program includes the specific devices used by the healthcare facility.
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - Connecting Neighbors through Social Media
Social media has enhanced how public agencies and residents communicate in an emergency. Public safety agencies across the country are increasingly combining the power of social networks with the power of connected neighbors to help create safer, more resilient communities. Learn how your online communities may be a critical resource for emergency alerts and notifications in the latest Public Health Matters post
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - The Healthy Traveler’s Mindset — Mitigating Risk and Embracing Adventure
As an international backpacker, Cullen Welch has been exposed to many experiences and foreign diseases that have challenged his health and immune system in ways he never expected—but he does not let these health risks slow him down. Instead he says, “I choose to be prepared by understanding how good hygiene, healthy habits, and vaccines can help me reduce these risks.” Read more about how Cullen prepares for everywhere, including his international travels, in the latest Public Health Matters blog.
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - Medicine Dispensing Exercise Held at Virginia Costco
Community preparedness requires participation from the entire community. Learn how public health and private sector partnerships can help local communities better prepare to respond to emergencies. The latest public health matters blog shows how one Virginia Costco is working with local public health partners to prepare for an emergency in which Costco’s warehouse could serve as a point of dispensing needed medications.
Categories: CDC News
NEW: Health Alert Network (HAN) No. 382 - Immediate Need for Healthcare Facilities to Review Procedures for Cleaning, Disinfecting, and Sterilizing Reusable Medical Devices
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are alerting healthcare providers and facilities about the public health need to properly maintain, clean, and disinfect or sterilize reusable medical devices. Recent infection control lapses due to non-compliance with recommended reprocessing procedures highlight a critical gap in patient safety. Healthcare facilities (e.g., hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers, clinics, and doctors’ offices) that utilize reusable medical devices are urged to immediately review current reprocessing practices at their facility to ensure they (1) are complying with all steps as directed by the device manufacturers, and (2) have in place appropriate policies and procedures that are consistent with current standards and guidelines.
Categories: CDC News
NEW: Health Alert Network (HAN) No. 382 - Immediate Need for Healthcare Facilities to Review Procedures for Cleaning, Disinfecting, and Sterilizing Reusable Medical Devices
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are alerting healthcare providers and facilities about the public health need to properly maintain, clean, and disinfect or sterilize reusable medical devices. Recent infection control lapses due to non-compliance with recommended reprocessing procedures highlight a critical gap in patient safety. Healthcare facilities (e.g., hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers, clinics, and doctors’ offices) that utilize reusable medical devices are urged to immediately review current reprocessing practices at their facility to ensure they (1) are complying with all steps as directed by the device manufacturers, and (2) have in place appropriate policies and procedures that are consistent with current standards and guidelines.
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - Frozen Without a Plan: A Mom, 3 Kids, and the Atlanta Ice Storm
For the first week of National Preparedness Month, CDC is encouraging people to think about their family emergency preparedness plans! In our latest Public Health Matters post, Kelly was stuck in her car overnight with her 5 year old and twin babies during the Atlanta ice storm. Make sure your family has an emergency plan, and don’t forget preparedness plans span beyond just your home—prepare for everywhere!
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - Emergency Response 10 Years After Katrina
Remembering the historic events of the Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, CDC’s Deputy Director and Chief Medical Officer for CDC’s Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response Dr. Dan Sosin sat down with Public Health Matters to talk about his experience deploying to Louisiana as a member of the United States Public Health Service. Looking back on a decade of emergency preparedness and response, Dr. Sosin shares how public health emergency response has evolved over the past 10 years.
Categories: CDC News
Upcoming COCA Call: CRE and C. difficile: Is Your Healthcare Facility Implementing the Necessary Approach to Stop the Spread?
We're at a tipping point: an increasing number of germs no longer respond to the drugs designed to kill them. Inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics and lack of infection control actions can contribute to drug resistant infections such as carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) and put patients at risk for deadly diarrhea (caused by Clostridium difficile). Even if one facility is following recommended infection controls, germs can be spread inside of and between healthcare facilities when patients are transferred from one healthcare facility to another without appropriate actions to stop spread. During this call, clinicians will hear from some of the nation’s top clinical experts on preventing antibiotic resistant infections and improving antibiotic stewardship. Join the discussion to learn about best practices that can be implemented today to protect patients from these potentially deadly infections.
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - Back to School–Be Prepared!
It is that time of year again—time to get the kids ready to go back to school! As school supplies are stuffed in backpacks, school bus schedules are double-checked, and first day of school outfits are perfected, make sure your emergency plans are in place, too. Our latest Public Health Matters blog has tips for students and parents to be prepared in case an emergency happens during the school day.
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - Unveiling the Burden of Dengue in Africa
Most travelers to Africa know to protect themselves from malaria, but malaria is far from the only mosquito-borne disease threat. Recent studies have revealed that dengue, a disease that is well recognized in Asia and the Americas, may be commonly misdiagnosed as malaria in Africa. We still have much to learn about dengue in Africa, but learning where there is risk of dengue is the first step to avoiding it. Learn more in our latest blog post.
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - Getting there Safely—Avoid Driving Disasters
Whether it is a weekend getaway or cross-country road trip, travel plans will involve taking to the roads this summer. Be prepared for hazardous weather that can interrupt your plans and cause dangerous driving conditions.
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - Celebrating the Fourth of July: Be Healthy, Be Prepared
As you celebrate the 4th with patriotic pride, cooking out, fireworks, and enjoying time with friends and family—take a little time to think about preparedness!
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - CDC Offers Hope in Fighting Brain-Eating Ameba
When 12-year-old Kali developed a nearly fatal infection caused by a “brain-eating” ameba known as Naegleria fowleri, her only hope of treatment was an investigational drug recently acquired by CDC’s Drug Service program. Read more about Kali’s story and the lifesaving CDC program that provides licensed physicians in the U.S. with investigational new drugs that are not readily available through pharmaceutical companies.
Categories: CDC News
NEW: Health Alert Network (HAN) No. 381 - Clinical Considerations for the Evaluation of Ill Travelers from Liberia to the United States
CDC recommends that healthcare providers consider not only Ebola virus disease (EVD), but also other much more likely infectious diseases, including malaria, when evaluating ill travelers from Liberia to the United States. Signs and symptoms of EVD are non-specific and overlap with many other more prevalent infectious diseases in West Africa. For any patient returning from West Africa and presenting with non-specific signs and symptoms consistent with EVD, providers should use clinical judgment, taking into account the patient’s epidemiological history for management, diagnostic testing, and treatment and coordinate healthcare as needed with the state or local health department to ensure that these patients get appropriate care without delay. The rapid identification of the cause of an acute illness in a Person Under Investigation (PUI) enables rapid treatment and resolution of symptoms.
Categories: CDC News
NEW: Health Alert Network (HAN) No. 381 - Clinical Considerations for the Evaluation of Ill Travelers from Liberia to the United States
CDC recommends that healthcare providers consider not only Ebola virus disease (EVD), but also other much more likely infectious diseases, including malaria, when evaluating ill travelers from Liberia to the United States. Signs and symptoms of EVD are non-specific and overlap with many other more prevalent infectious diseases in West Africa. For any patient returning from West Africa and presenting with non-specific signs and symptoms consistent with EVD, providers should use clinical judgment, taking into account the patient’s epidemiological history for management, diagnostic testing, and treatment and coordinate healthcare as needed with the state or local health department to ensure that these patients get appropriate care without delay. The rapid identification of the cause of an acute illness in a Person Under Investigation (PUI) enables rapid treatment and resolution of symptoms.
Categories: CDC News
New: Public Health Matters Blog - Tiny Turtle–Serious Health Threat
Wild or pet turtles may be cute and fun to pick-up and play with, but they can carry bacteria that may make you seriously sick. Turtles, particularly small turtles, can carry Salmonella—the bacteria that causes salmonellosis. In 2012, there were eight multi-state outbreaks of turtle-associated salmonellosis in the U.S. and in Puerto Rico, resulting in 78 hospitalizations; 70% of those affected were children under age 10. Learn about the laws in place to prevent turtle-associated salmonellosis in the U.S. in the latest Public Health Matters post.
Categories: CDC News
Upcoming COCA Call: Clinical Updates with a Global Perspective
During this COCA call, clinicians will receive guidance for healthcare providers presented with a patient who has traveled from Liberia in the last 21 days. Clinicians will get guidance on taking thorough histories (covering health, travel, and exposure) and on using clinical judgment to evaluate patients based on those histories and their symptoms, and will be advised to consider other illnesses occurring among travelers returning from West Africa in the differential diagnosis, including malaria.
Categories: CDC News
NEW: Health Alert Network (HAN) No. 380 - Updated Information and Guidelines for Evaluation of Patients for Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) Infection
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) continues to work with the World Health Organization (WHO) and other partners to closely monitor Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) globally, including the cases of MERS-CoV infection recently reported by China and the Republic of Korea, to better understand the risks to public health. The purpose of this HAN Advisory is to provide updated guidance to state health departments and healthcare providers in the evaluation of patients for MERS-CoV infection, which have been revised in light of the current situation in the Republic of Korea. Healthcare providers and public health officials should maintain awareness of the need to consider MERS-CoV infection in ill persons who have recently traveled from countries in or near the Arabian Peninsula1 or in the Republic of Korea as outlined in the guidance below. Please disseminate this information to healthcare providers, especially infectious diseases specialists, intensive care physicians, internists, infection preventionists, and to emergency departments and microbiology laboratories.
Categories: CDC News
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