Proactive Onsite Infection Prevention & Control Assessments with VDH
Health department staff conduct proactive infection prevention and control (IPC) assessments at healthcare facilities that are not experiencing an outbreak. The assessments are not regulatory and are designed to identify a facility’s IPC program strengths and areas for opportunity.
During these onsite visits, health department staff assist healthcare facilities in reviewing current infection prevention practices and provide recommendations for improvement. The proactive assessments are conducted using a standardized set of infection control assessment and response (ICAR) tools developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. These tools may also be used by healthcare facilities as self-assessments to conduct internal quality improvement even after the visit.
Eligibility
All Virginia acute and long-term acute care hospitals, long-term care facilities, outpatient clinics, and outpatient dialysis facilities are eligible to request proactive onsite IPC assessments.
Requirements
Completion of an ICAR assessment and site visit, along with a facility commitment to take measures to implement VDH recommendations to improve infection prevention and control practices.
Benefits to Participation
- Enhance your facility’s IPC capacity
- Receive free resources and recommendations to address IPC areas identified for improvement
- Strengthen the collaborative relationship between your healthcare facility and VDH
Resources
Proactive ICARs: What to Expect
- The facility requests an assessment by completing the request form. If you would like to request an ICAR for more than one type of setting, please complete a request form for each setting.
- The facility will identify a primary point of contact for the visit (e.g., infection preventionist, nursing director, nursing supervisor)
- Work with the VDH ICAR team over phone and/or email to schedule the site visit.
- When requested, provide basic facility demographic information to the VDH ICAR team, such as facility type, number of licensed beds, and number of infection preventionist full-time equivalents.
- Determine which staff/roles (e.g., leadership, nursing, environmental services, etc.) you would like to participate in the visit.
- Identify a meeting or conference room at your facility to hold a portion of the visit.
- Recommended: Prepare your facility by completing a self-assessment. This can be shared by the regional infection preventionist upon request.
- Acute Care (including Long-Term Acute Care Hospitals): CDC Infection Prevention and Control Assessment Tool for Acute Care Hospitals
- Long-Term Care: CDC Infection Prevention and Control Assessment Tool for Long-term Care Facilities
- Outpatient Settings (Non-dialysis): CDC Infection Prevention and Control Assessment Tool for Outpatient Settings
- Dialysis Settings: CDC Infection Prevention and Control Assessment Tool for Dialysis settings
- Participate in the visit. The visit is not regulatory but is a collaboration to help identify infection prevention program strengths and areas of opportunity.
- Together with the VDH ICAR team, select the infection prevention priorities on which to focus efforts.
- The VDH ICAR team will then assess the identified priorities and the IPC domains (or categories) such as hand hygiene, personal protective equipment, and environmental cleaning and disinfection. The topics will vary based on the type of healthcare setting.
- The VDH ICAR team will send the facility a report with recommendations and resources.
- The recommendations report will summarize infection prevention strengths, areas of opportunity, and provide resources.
- The Infection Prevention Scoring Tool will also be shared, serving as a high-level summary of performance in each infection control category.
- Please check the Definitions section (below) for more information on the scoring tool.
- The facility implements ICAR recommendations, using tools and identified resources.
- The facility reaches out to VDH as needed for assistance with implementing IPC recommendations (e.g., requests for help with training on a specific topic).
- VDH will follow-up with the facility to check on progress toward addressing IPC gaps.
- Follow-up will occur no later than six months after the visit.
- This may occur over phone, email, or may include a follow-up onsite visit if needed.
- The facility should be prepared to share their improvement plan, current progress, and any identified barriers.
- Follow-up will occur no later than six months after the visit.
The following definitions have been developed to assist with the implementation of elements of the CDC ICAR assessment tools related to infection prevention competency, training, auditing and feedback.
- Infection Prevention Scoring Tool: This report was developed by the VDH HAI/AR Program. It provides a quantitative measure for each infection control category, summarizing strengths and opportunities for improvement.
- The scoring tool can be used to:
- Report back to facility administration in a simple, user-friendly format.
- Prioritize follow-up actions for areas in need of improvement.
- Compile and analyze scores in a systematized way statewide to identify and address major defects under each infection control domain.
- The scoring tool can be used to:
- Healthcare Personnel Infection Prevention (IP) Competency: The proven ability to apply essential knowledge, skills, and abilities to prevent the transmission of pathogens during the provision of care.
- Healthcare Personnel IP Competency-Based Training: The provision of job-specific education, training, and assessment to ensure that healthcare personnel possess IP competency.
- Competency Assessment: The verification of IP competency through the use of knowledge-based testing and direct observation. If direct observation is not included as part of a competency assessment, an alternative method to ensure that healthcare personnel possess essential knowledge, skills, and abilities should be used.
- Audit: Direct observation or monitoring of healthcare personnel adherence to job-specific IP measures.
Reactive Infection Prevention & Control Assessments
Infection prevention and control assessments can also be conducted in response to an outbreak or known infection prevention concern. This type of assessment is called a reactive IPC assessment or reactive ICAR. The VDH HAI/AR Program recommends that a reactive ICAR be conducted when there has been an infection control breach (e.g., unsafe injection practices identified) or in response to certain types of outbreaks (e.g., Candida auris, MRSA in a neonatal intensive care unit, invasive group A Strep in an acute care or long-term care facility). Reactive assessments may include COVID-19 ICARs as well, which can be done via an onsite visit or virtually (teleICAR) in certain circumstances. For questions regarding reactive ICARs and/or teleICARs, please contact hai@vdh.virginia.gov.
Additional questions about ICARs? Please contact hai@vdh.virginia.gov.
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