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NOT ON MY WATCH
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 Do you want to know more about the “Not On My Watch” campaign?



Here's how your hospital can join the fight against healthcare associated infections. We can customise a special “Not On My Watch” in-service kit for you and your facility free of charge, this package is loaded with everything you need to drive your own "Not on My Watch" campaign. Pending on the needs of your facility, some of the supporting materials you will found in the kit will Includes:
  HAI prevention Media kit with ads and press
 releases
  Healthcare associated infection education for your staff -
 and patients and visitors, too!
  Infection prevention Posters, fliers and brochures
 and much more



Get the word out to your facility and your community about your dedication to preventing infection. Please, contact your Kimberly-Clark representative to request your Infection Prevention Communication Toolkit and / or subscribe to our HAI Newsletter and we will be able to contact you and customised a Not On My Watch kit just for you

 

To address risk factors that are known contributors to surgical site infections, Kimberly Clark offers solutions that are designed to:

• maintain patient core temperature
• reduce contamination of the surgical site due to skin flora throughout the surgical procedure
• provide barriers to prevent transfer of contaminants from person to person and to protect a
• surgical wound from contamination
• maintain sterility of surgical instruments prior to use for surgery For more information, click on the links below:



Surgical site infections (SSIs) initiated during invasive procedures can require additional and/or extended treatment. Despite the best efforts of healthcare facilities to maintain safe surgical environments, surgical site infections result in up to $10 billion in treatment costs every year in the U.S. alone.

  • 780,000 out of 30 million surgical procedures performed annually in the U.S. result in SSI.1
  • In the United Kingdom, the estimated direct costs for a patient who has developed a surgical site infection are between €2,265 and €2,518.2
  • According to a study in the Netherlands, SSIs result in 5.8 to 17 extra days of hospitalization.3
  • In France, approximately 11% of surgical patients acquire a surgical site infection.4

Some common causes of SSI are:

  • Complications from surgical hypothermia
  • Contamination of the incision area by skin flora
  • Bacterial cross–contamination
  • Surgical instrument contamination

1 Cook, R. “Hospitals learn simple, cheap steps can prevent infections,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 18, 2004; F1.
2 Coello R, Glenister H, Fereres J, Bartlett C, Leigh D, Sedgwick J, et al. The cost of infection in surgical patients: a case–control study. J Hosp Infect 1993; 24(4):239–50., and Plowman R, Graves N, Griffin MA, Roberts JA, Swan AV, Cookson, B, et al. The rate and cost of hospital–acquired infections occurring in patients admitted to selected specialties of a district general hospital in England and the national burden imposed. J Hosp Infect 2001; 47(3):198–209.
3 Geubbels EL, Mintjes–de Groot AJ, Van den Berg JM, de Boer AS. An operating surveillance system of surgical site infections in the Netherlands: results of the PREZIES national surveillance network. Preventie van Ziekenhuisinfecties door Surveillance. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2000; 21 (5): 107.
4 Source: Prevalence of nosocomial infections in France; results of the nationwide survey in 1996. Journal of Hospital Infection. 2000; 46:186–193


Clinical Education (CEs and CMEs)
  • Costs of Healthcare Acquired Infections
  • New Non-Pharmacologic Opportunities to Reduce the Risk of Surgical Site Infections
  • Oral Care is Critical Care

    More Clinical Education...

    Research & Tools
  • The OSSIE Toolkit
  • The Clinical Issue #1: Pressure Ulcers in the Surgical Patient
  • CDC Hand Hygiene Guidelines
  • SSI Cost of Infection Savings Calculator
  • Patient Risk Factors and Best Practices for Surgical Site Infection Prevention.
  • Prevent Surgical Site Infections.
  • Pressure Ulcers In The Surgical Patient.
  • Cleaning Reusable Medical Devices: A Critical First Step

    Read more Resources and Tools...

    Research & Reports
  • APIC Elimination Guides
         

    Guide to the Elimination of Methicillin-Resistant Staphyloccus aureus (MRSA) Transmission in Hospital Settings, 2nd Edition 
    Guide to the Elimination of Orthopedic Surgical Site Infections  
    CAUTIs 
    Clostridium difficile 
    CRBSIs                                                                                                                                                                                           MRSA in Hospital Settings                                                                                                                                                        Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia



     




     

     

     

    Read More
  • Immediate-Use Steam Sterilization
         

    The Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI) and six other organizations have endorsed a sweeping statement dealing with a common sterilization process for medical instruments. As part of the effort to clarify the process, the statement endorses replacing the term “flash sterilization” with “immediate use steam sterilization.”

    Download PDF
  • The Guidelines for Disinfection and Sterilization in Healthcare Facilities
         

    Last updated in 200 by William Rutala, Ph.D, M.P.H., David Weber, M.D., M.P.H and the Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee (HICPAC).

    Read More
  • Maintaining Intraoperative Normothermia: A Meta-analysis of Outcomes with Costs
         
    Download PDF
  • Hospitals collaborate to decrease surgical site infections
         
    Read More
  • Health and economic impact of surgical site infections diagnosed after hospital discharge.
         
    Read More
  • The impact of surgical-site infections in the 1990s
         

    Attributable mortality, excess length of hospitalization, and extra costs.

    Read More
  • The Economic Costs of Surgical Site Infections
         
    Read More

    Read more healthcare associated infection research and reports...
     
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