Sepsis Outbreak at LA County Dialysis Center Prompts Public Health Investigation - Infection Control Today |
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Three patients with chronic kidney failure treated at a dialysis center in Los Angeles County, California contracted sepsis caused by improper cleaning and disinfection of a dialyzer.
Two patients developed fevers and were hospitalized. One patient was assessed and treated as an outpatient; all patients later recovered.
“Hemodialysis technology is life-saving, but carries a high risk of infection, regardless of the type of dialyzer used,” says English. “Dialysis centers must work to reduce the risk of infection for their patients by ensuring proper cleaning and disinfection procedures are being followed throughout the facility. If multi-use dialyzers with removable headers and O-rings are used, processes to ensure proper disinfection must be in place.” The County of Los Angeles Department of Public Health is working with state and federal partners to conduct outreach to dialysis centers to decrease dialysis-associated infections and will discuss lessons learned from the investigation at the APIC Annual Conference. “Contaminated O-rings have been previously implicated in dialysis-associated infection outbreaks. This report underscores the need for adequate infection prevention training in dialysis settings, as well as the critical partnership between public health departments and infection preventionists in hospitals and outpatient settings,” says Michelle Farber, RN, CIC, APIC's 2012 president. “Collaboration with public health is essential to pinpoint the cause of infection outbreaks and improve infection prevention practices across all healthcare settings.” Hemodialysis is a life-saving procedure that uses an artificial kidney, or dialyzer, to remove waste from the blood when the kidneys no longer work. It is most often the treatment for end-stage renal disease. Following cardiovascular disease, infection is the second highest cause of death for hemodialysis patients. The most recent draft of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ National Action Plan to Prevent Healthcare-associated Infections: Roadmap to Elimination includes a revised chapter on efforts to prevent and reduce healthcare-associated infections in end-stage renal disease patients. In an effort to establish best practices for protecting patients undergoing hemodialysis, APIC published a Guide to the Elimination of Infections in Hemodialysis and has an archived webinar on dialysis event surveillance and reporting.
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