2018
DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofy053
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Outpatient Infection Prevention: A Practical Primer

Abstract: As more patients seek care in the outpatient setting, the opportunities for health care–acquired infections and associated outbreaks will increase. Without uptake of core infection prevention and control strategies through formal initiation of infection prevention programs, outbreaks and patient safety issues will surface. This review provides a step-wise approach for implementing an outpatient infection control program, highlighting some of the common pitfalls and high-priority areas.

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Cited by 12 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Clinics should create a simple screening algorithm or questionnaire for early detection of potentially infectious persons. Travel advisory posters can be displayed to facilitate the screening process by prompting patients to be proactive by self‐reporting travel history . Individuals who meet criteria for highly communicable diseases requiring isolation, such as the novel COVID‐19 or other emerging respiratory infections, should be provided a mask and placed in a private exam room as soon as possible as per the infectious control guidance found on the WHO and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) websites .…”
Section: Cancer Patients In the Outpatient Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clinics should create a simple screening algorithm or questionnaire for early detection of potentially infectious persons. Travel advisory posters can be displayed to facilitate the screening process by prompting patients to be proactive by self‐reporting travel history . Individuals who meet criteria for highly communicable diseases requiring isolation, such as the novel COVID‐19 or other emerging respiratory infections, should be provided a mask and placed in a private exam room as soon as possible as per the infectious control guidance found on the WHO and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) websites .…”
Section: Cancer Patients In the Outpatient Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When measles virus exposures occur in health care facilities, identifying and notifying nonimmune exposed persons and offering postexposure prophylaxis, when indicated, can be time- and human resource–intensive ( 5 ). Although most hospitals have infection control protocols that include use of negative pressure rooms, most outpatient facilities do not ( 6 ). No surveyed facility in this evaluation had a negative pressure room, the lack of which could make controlling airborne measles virus transmission in outpatient settings difficult ( 6 ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although most hospitals have infection control protocols that include use of negative pressure rooms, most outpatient facilities do not ( 6 ). No surveyed facility in this evaluation had a negative pressure room, the lack of which could make controlling airborne measles virus transmission in outpatient settings difficult ( 6 ). However, if they lacked a negative pressure room, most surveyed health care facilities used strategies to attempt to reduce exposures to measles and other airborne-transmitted pathogens, save time and human resources, and minimize health care–associated transmission of measles.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While there are resources providing guidance on implementing EP and IPC best practices in outpatient facilities, 16,[19][20][21] many UCCs have limited resources and few incentives to fully do so. There is a need to develop UCC focused consensus guidelines, easy-to-use implementation tools and modifiable templates to better meet the needs of this unique practice type.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%