| Literature DB >> 16330305 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many US hospitals lack the capacity to house safely a surge of potentially infectious patients, increasing the risk of secondary transmission. Respiratory protection and negative-pressure rooms are needed to prevent transmission of airborne-spread diseases, but US hospitals lack available and/or properly functioning negative-pressure rooms. Creating new rooms or retrofitting existing facilities is time-consuming and expensive.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16330305 PMCID: PMC7119117 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajic.2005.05.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Infect Control ISSN: 0196-6553 Impact factor: 2.918
Fig 1Patient management and placement for airborne precautions
Disease/condition requiring airborne isolation precautions
| Infection/condition | Duration of precautions |
|---|---|
| Chickenpox ( | Maintain precautions until all lesions are crusted. For exposed susceptible individuals, begin precautions 10 days after exposure and continue until 21 days after last exposure (up to 28 days if VZIG given). |
| Herpes Zoster ( | Maintain precautions for duration of illness. Susceptible health care workers should not enter the room if other immune caregivers are available. |
| Measles (rubeola), all presentations | Maintain precautions for duration of illness. |
| Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) | Maintain precautions for duration of illness. |
| Smallpox ( | Maintain precautions until all lesions are crusted. Susceptible health care workers should not enter the room if other immune caregivers are available. |
| Tuberculosis (Pulmonary (confirmed or suspected) or laryngeal disease) | Discontinue precautions only after patient is on effective therapy, is clinically improving, and has 3 consecutive negative sputum smears collected on different days or TB is ruled out. |
| Viral hemorrhagic fever | Maintain precautions for duration of illness. Airborne precautions for VHFs are not reflected in HICPAC's isolation guidelines, but more recent research indicates the need to implement these precautions when feasible. In mass casualty events in which negative pressure is not available, strict adherence to isolation precautions outlined by the JAMA consensus article will help reduce the risk of transmission. |
Methods of establishing temporary negative pressure
| Methods to obtain temporary negative pressure (in order of preference): |
| (1) Bleed air |
| (2) Bleed air |
| (3) Use a centrifugal blower to exhaust air outside from the patient's room (the unit must be set up to exhaust air out through a window |
| (4) Use a specifically designed air cleaner to exhaust air outside from the patient's room (the unit must be set up to exhaust air out through a window |
| (5) Use floor and/or window fans to exhaust air outside the patient's room |
Remove appropriate amount of air volume to achieve negative pressure (to remove more air than flows into the room).
The window must be >25 feet away from air intakes, other open windows, or be more than 100 yards from another occupied building or high-risk area.
See Fig 2 for visual depiction of appropriate fan set-up.
Fig 2Appropriate placement of floor and/or window fans to facilitate removal of contaminated air. For visual clarity, the door appears open in the picture but should always remain closed, except when staff need to enter or exit the room. A floor or table fan should be placed near the doorway pointing toward the window fan. Never point a fan toward the patient's door because this can facilitate the spread of infectious particles into the corridor. A second fan must be utilized to help draw contaminated air from the room at the same rate at which the fan at the door is drawing air into the room. The fan in the window must be facing the outside of the building to direct air outward, and the window must be open. If the room's windows do not open, this fan system must not be utilized; the wind created by such a set-up may actually lead to an increased risk of transmission.