Draining pneumonia fluids
[DOC File]INFECTION CONTROL PLAN
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Other Potentially Infectious Materials The following human body fluids: semen, synovial fluids, vaginal secretions, pleural fluids, amniotic fluid, cerebrospinal fluid or where it is difficult or impossible to differentiate between body fluids. Also includes unfixed human tissues or organs.
[DOC File]Pneumonia and Hospital Acquired Pneumonia (HAP/VAP)
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Pneumonia . Pneumonia is an infection of the lung. People can catch pneumonia for a lot of different reasons. Pneumonias also happen in the because people in the hospital are usually sick from other diseases or problems. All bugs find it easier to attack sick people. A lot of different bacteria (bugs) and viruses (like the flu) can cause pneumonia.
[DOC File]Medical Facility Education Tracking and Reporting Software
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For contact with blood, body fluids, secretions and contaminated items . For contact with mucous membranes and non-intact skin. Masks, goggles, face masks . Gowns . Protects skin from blood or body fluid contact . Prevents soiling of clothing during procedures that may involve contact with blood or body fluids. Respiratory Protection
[DOC File]INFECTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL - NEW EMPLOYEE ...
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Body Fluids: Blood. Semen. Vaginal secretions. Urine. Non-fixed (hardened and preserved) tissues and other body fluids. Note: OSHA prohibits staff from eating and drinking in patient care areas or any area where blood or body fluids are handled. This includes exam, treatment, procedure and patient rooms, labs, EMS areas and nursing stations.
[DOC File]Supplement I: Infection Control in Healthcare, Home, and ...
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NIOSH-approved respiratory protection (e.g., N-95 respirator) for entry to rooms of patients with infectious pulmonary or laryngeal M. tuberculosis, draining skin lesions with M. tuberculosis, SARS-CoV disease, smallpox, and viral hemorrhagic fevers. For more detailed …
WHO | World Health Organization
ASSESS AND CLASSIFY. THE SICK CHILD. AGE 2 MONTHS UP TO 5 YEARS. World Health Organization and UNICEF. 1997 Integrated Management of Childhood Illness was prepared by the World Health Organization's Division for Control of Diarrhoeal and Respiratory Infections (CDR), now the Division of Child Health and Development (CHD), and UNICEF through a contract with ACT …
[DOC File]A Parent's Guide to MRSA in California - Health Services ...
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Some staph skin infections are treated by draining the sores and may not require antibiotics. Draining these sores should be done by a doctor. If the doctor gives you antibiotics, make sure you take all of the medicine, even if the infection is getting better. Do not share your medicine with anyone else or save it to use at another time.
[DOC File]Fairhurst a la chart - David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
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Coxiella burnetti (Zoonose, Weil-felix negative, Tx: Tetracycline) Q fever- fever, headache, flu-like symptoms. Can proceed to atypical pneumonia, hepatitis. Rash is RARE Aerosol from cattle and sheep bodily fluids Tetracycline Milk pasteurization and vaccine “Carol Burnet is Qte (cute) b/c she has NO rash” 1 “Hememmm Chocolaaate!”
[DOC File]POLICY: INFECTION CONTROL
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All body and blood fluids will be considered infectious regardless of the perceived status of the source individual. ... disseminated Varicella zoster (including primary infection), Varicella pneumonia, and pulmonary tuberculosis. ... major draining abcess, significant weeping cellulitis, decubitus ulcer with major infection and major wound ...
[DOC File]Favorite Healthcare Staffing
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Open or draining sores. General rash. Diarrhea (not food related) ... Hepatitis A, B, C, Staph and Strep infections, Gastroenteritis-salmonella, and shigella, Pneumonia, Syphilis, TB, Malaria, Measles, Chicken Pox, Herpes, Urinary tract infections, and Blood infections. ... The following human body fluids: semen, vaginal secretions ...
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