Infection Control in Health Care: An Overview

When you work in health care, each day brings its own challenges. But caring for and protecting patients and yourself, is always the top priority. This includes protecting patients from getting sick while they are receiving care, and protecting yourself from getting sick so that you can provide good care.

Infection control is what you do, or the actions you take, to prevent or stop the spread of germs. These actions are a critical part of protecting your patients, yourself and others within the healthcare setting.

With a foundational knowledge about germ spread and the “why” behind infection control, you can recognize infection risks and make the right decisions to prevent people from getting sick.

Recognizing infection risks

Risk is a part of life. When you approach a broken stoplight at a busy intersection or see a small child reaching toward a hot stove, almost automatically you slow down your car or reach for the child to prevent something bad from happening. This is our brain recognizing risk and taking action.

You can use this same process of recognizing risk when it comes to infection control in health care. If you learn to identify the opportunities for germs to spread, then you can step in to stop them and prevent infections. To recognize these opportunities, you need to know where germs live and how they spread.

Questions to ask yourself before tasks to help you recognize infection risks and stop the spread of germs:

Where germs live and how they spread

Although we can’t see them, germs are everywhere, and they need somewhere to grow – a place where they can live. These places, called reservoirs, are in and on our bodies and in the environment.

Germs also need a way to get from place to place or to people, which are called pathways.

We approach germs differently in healthcare settings. The reservoirs and pathways in healthcare settings present more opportunities for potentially harmful germs to spread. There’s greater risk for infections because:

Understanding reservoirs and pathways can help you choose the right infection control actions to stop the spread of germs and protect your patients, yourself and your coworkers.

Common reservoirs in and on the human body

Skin