HAIs

The Infection Control Today® health care-acquired infections (HAIs) page presents updates on the latest techniques and strategies in the never-ending battle between infection preventionists and HAIs. Focusing on the latest in medical literature, we also present perspectives from the top infection preventionists and other medical experts in the country about how to put the growing knowledge of HAIs into use in the everyday world of infection prevention. Articles and videos often focus on methods to contain and control pathogens and multidrug-resistant organisms from spreading within the health care system.

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Cori L. Ofstead, MSPH; Brandon M. Gantt, MHA, CRCST, CHL, CER, LSSGBH; and Jill E. Holdsworth, MS, CIC, FAPIC, NREMT, CRCST, CHL, an infection preventionist in Atlanta, Georgia.
Better Alerts, Better Cleaning: Why IFU Updates and Borescope Protocols Must Be Built Into SPD Workflows

July 24th 2025

Sterile processing departments are facing a new standard: clean is not clean unless you can see it. At HSPA 2025, experts emphasized that updated IFUs and borescope inspections must be built into routine workflows, not as extra tasks, but as core components of quality control and infection prevention.

Pathogen Pulse
Pathogen Pulse: Facilities Need the SPD, Yersinia Enterocolitica Outbreak, and More

July 22nd 2025

A mother and child having online telemedicine consultation with remote doctor about cold and flu virus treatment.  (Adobe Stock 479767497 Studio Romantic)
Telemedicine's Transformative Role in PPE Distribution and Sterile Equipment Management

July 22nd 2025

Set of bright yellow sharps containers with biohazard labels and red lids used in clinics and hospitals for safe disposal of medical needles and waste. (Adobe Stock 1521632893 by Maksim)
Reducing Hidden Risks: Why Sharps Injuries Still Go Unreported

July 18th 2025

Realistic electron microscopy of Clostridioides difficile, highly detailed rod-shaped structure, spores with textured surfaces, flagella, acid-green and purple hues, contrasting black background.  (Adobe Stock 1318793046 by Waseem by AI)
New Study Explores Oral Vancomycin to Prevent C difficile Recurrence, But Questions Remain

July 17th 2025

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APIC Launches Consumer Infection Prevention Campaign

October 17th 2012

Building on its major educational campaign Infection Prevention and You focusing on hospital infection prevention, the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) introduced educational materials for long-term care, home care, and ambulatory care to help patients stay safe from infections. Introduced in concert with International Infection Prevention Week (IIPW), Oct. 14-20, 2012, the new Infection Prevention and You campaign materials help guide important conversations patients should hold with their healthcare team to prevent infection. IIPW provides a focal point to empower stakeholders, including patients and their families, in taking an active role to prevent infection. In addition to empowering patients and their families to speak up to prevent infection, it is the first consumer campaign of its kind designed to educate consumers about infection preventionistsdedicated experts who partner with the broader healthcare team and implement evidence-based methods to prevent healthcare-associated infections. Patients often feel intimidated in the healthcare setting and may not know what to say or what do to stay safe, says APIC Communications Committee chair Ann Marie Pettis, RN, BSN, CIC, who assisted in developing the campaign content. Due to the growing need to help patients in non-acute care settings understand the active role they can play to prevent infections, we customized the campaign material for long-term, home, and ambulatory care. We hope that these materials will be used to promote quality and patient safety initiatives. APICs Infection Prevention and You campaign material is available in a variety of formats, including posters, brochures, and fliers. Individual healthcare organizations can also customize the material by adding their logos and the contact information for their infection prevention department. Campaign material is available for free download at: www.apic.org/patientsafety