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I have had first hand knowledge in helthcare facilities and let me tell you I see breeches of protocol all the time. Doctors and many nurses fail to follow alot of simple guidelines like washing their hands. (doctors are the worst) I can't tell you how manytimes I've observed nurses removing their gloves the wrong way or removing personal protection from isolated rooms, in the wrong order....let alone a hazmat suit. I've even seen some hang their gowns and reuse them upon reentering an isolated room because their aren't enough clean ones. We leave the facilities without showering and washing our clothes or changing our shoes to our street shoes. Simple things really but still it's done all the time. Virus's heighten the awareness, yes, but people are still people.
But also in your post is some misinformation.
Often gloves and gowns are not to protect the staff member but to protect the patient. You wear gloves so your hands don't touch and contaminate the wound or IV or whatever you are doing. You are protecting the patient, not the other way around in general
I hope that these workers were given a choice whether or not to work with someone once an Ebola diagnosis is made, and that they were told it was possible restrictions such as this might be put in place even when they are healthy.To that end, Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings told CNN's Anderson Cooper on Thursday night that about 50 people from Texas Health Presbyterian have signed a document legally restricting where they can go and what they can do until they totally clear of Ebola.
Among other things, they'll be placed on a "Do Not Board list" that would prohibit them from flying commercially like Vinson did. (Frieden
"They can't take public transportation. They must have personal monitoring twice a day," Rawlings said. "Furthermore, they cannot go to public places."
Waterfall, I was referring to your comments about taking off gloves the wrong way.
With this Ebola scare and with SARS , infection control was very different than day to day care.
Removing gloves after a procedure isn't a big deal as the requirement for gloves in general is to protect the patient from the nurse, not the nurse from the patient.
So , I suction a patient using gloves and a sterile suction catheter. Then I pull off my glove inside out and generally I keep the suction catheter inside the glove as I pull it off.
But I am not particularly concerned about touching part of the glove with my clean hand as the patient is not contaminated
That is the routine in most patient situations.