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Related Concept Videos

Healthcare Associated Infections II: Preventive Measures01:22

Healthcare Associated Infections II: Preventive Measures

3.5K
Essential infection prevention measures are based on the knowledge of the infection chain, the modes of transmission in healthcare settings, and the use of the best practices in all healthcare settings. Compulsory public reporting of healthcare-associated infection rates is needed to allow individuals and the community to make informed choices regarding selecting a healthcare facility.
The best practices for preventing healthcare-associated infections include hand hygiene, patient risk...
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Standard Precaution01:26

Standard Precaution

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Standard precautions are the minimum infection control safeguards used while caring for all patients, irrespective of their disease condition. They help prevent the spread of common infectious microorganisms to healthcare workers, patients, and visitors in all healthcare settings.
Hand hygiene is the most crucial means to prevent the transmission of disease. Employers are legally required to provide their workers with personal protective equipment (PPE) to minimize exposure or contact with...
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Transmission-based Precautions I: Contact, Enteric, and Droplets01:17

Transmission-based Precautions I: Contact, Enteric, and Droplets

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Transmission-based precautions are for patients known to be infected or suspected to be infected or colonized with organisms that pose a significant risk to others. Some transmission-based precautions include contact, enteric, and droplet.
Contact Precautions:
Contact precautions are the measures taken to prevent the transmission of infectious agents, especially epidemiologically important microorganisms such as MRSA or influenza, primarily transmitted through direct or indirect contact with an...
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Infection01:20

Infection

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When a pathogen enters the body and reproduces, it can cause an infection, damage body cells, and cause illness symptoms that eventually lead to disease. Therefore, its prevention requires breaking the chain of infection.
The chain begins with pathogens: bacteria, viruses, fungi, prions, or parasites such as protozoa helminths. These can be present on the skin as transient or resident flora, or they can be acquired from the environment. Identifying and treating the type of infection and...
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Transmission-based Precautions II: Airborne and Protective Environment01:25

Transmission-based Precautions II: Airborne and Protective Environment

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Transmission-based precautions are for patients infected or suspected to be infected (or colonized) with organisms posing a significant risk to others. The transmission precautions include airborne and protective environment precautions.
Airborne precautions:
Use airborne precautions when treating patients known or suspected to have diseases that spread through the air—for example, tuberculosis or measles. These organisms are present in smaller droplets expelled by an infected person and...
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Asepsis01:28

Asepsis

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The condition of being free from disease-causing living pathogens is asepsis. Aseptic techniques include a set of standard practices to achieve asepsis. An example is the regular environmental cleaning of all parts of the healthcare facility and hand hygiene at home before preparing or eating food. Medical and surgical asepsis in healthcare practice protects patients from harmful pathogens, minimizes the risk of contamination of susceptible sites, and reduces the risk of infection transmission.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Dec 11, 2025

Safety Precautions and Operating Procedures in an ABSL-4 Laboratory: 2. General Practices
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Safety Precautions and Operating Procedures in an ABSL-4 Laboratory: 2. General Practices

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Biosecurity Measures in Clinical Practice.

Christopher G Byers1

  • 14321 North 136th Street, Omaha, NE 68164, USA. Electronic address: http://www.CriticalCareDVM.com.

The Veterinary Clinics of North America. Small Animal Practice
|August 25, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Hospitalized pets are vulnerable to hospital-acquired infections. Veterinarians must implement infection control, biosecurity, and biosafety measures to prevent disease transmission and protect animal health.

Keywords:
BiosecurityDisinfectionFomiteHand hygieneHospital-acquired infectionInfection controlNosocomial infectionZoonotic disease

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Area of Science:

  • Veterinary Medicine
  • Infection Control
  • Animal Health

Background:

  • Hospitalized companion animals face a higher risk of acquiring nosocomial infections.
  • Veterinary professionals are responsible for maintaining high standards of infection control, biosecurity, and biosafety.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To highlight the importance of infection control in veterinary hospitals.
  • To outline strategies for reducing disease transmission in clinical settings.

Main Methods:

  • Implementing pathogen elimination and hazard substitution.
  • Utilizing engineering and administrative controls.
  • Ensuring the use of personal protective equipment by veterinary teams.

Main Results:

  • Veterinary teams can significantly decrease the unintentional transmission of diseases.
  • Proactive infection control measures enhance patient safety and outcomes.

Conclusions:

  • Comprehensive infection control strategies are crucial for preventing hospital-acquired infections in companion animals.
  • Veterinary hospitals must prioritize biosecurity and biosafety to safeguard animal health.