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Making respiratory care safe for neonatal and paediatric intensive care unit staff: mitigation strategies and use of filters.
Carter, Bradley G; Harcourt, Edward; Harris, Alexandra; Zampetti, Michael; Duke, Trevor; Tingay, David.
  • Carter BG; Neonatal and Paediatric Intensive Care Units The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne.
  • Harcourt E; Neonatal and Paediatric Intensive Care Units The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne.
  • Harris A; Neonatal Unit The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne.
  • Zampetti M; Neonatal and Paediatric Intensive Care Units The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne.
  • Duke T; Paediatric Intensive Care Unit The Royal Children's Hospital.
  • Tingay D; Department of Pediatrics The University of Melbourne.
Can J Respir Ther ; 60: 13-27, 2024.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38384335
ABSTRACT

Background:

Many medical devices in pediatric and newborn intensive care units can potentially expose healthcare workers (HCWs) and others to transmission of respiratory and other viruses and bacteria. Such fomites include ventilators, nebulizers, and monitoring equipment.

Approach:

We report the general, novel approach we have taken to identify and mitigate these risks and to protect HCWs, visitors and patients from exposure while maintaining the optimal performance of such respiratory equipment.

Findings:

The approach combined a high level of personal protective equipment (PPE), strict hand hygiene, air filtration and air conditioning and other relevant viral risk mitigation guidelines. This report describes the experiences from the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic to provide a reference framework that can be applied generally. The steps we took consisted of auditing our equipment and processes to identify risk through sources of potentially contaminated gas that may contain aerosolized virus, seeking advice and liaising with suppliers/manufacturers, devising mitigation strategies using indirect and direct approaches (largely filtering), performing tests on equipment to verify proper function and the absence of negative impacts and the development and implementation of relevant procedures and practices. We had a multidisciplinary team to guide the process. We monitored daily for hospital-acquired infections among staff caring for SARS-CoV-2 patients.

Conclusion:

Our approach was successful as we have continued to offer optimal intensive care to our patients, and we did not find any healthcare worker who was infected through the course of caring for patients at the bedside. The lessons learnt will be of benefit to future local outbreaks or pandemics.
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