
Learn from your mistakes; reach for the stars. We all have learning to do. Just don't quit!
Learn from your mistakes; reach for the stars. We all have learning to do. Just don't quit!
Take 5 minutes to catch up on Infection Control Today®’s highlights for the week ending March 19, 2023.
With all the misinformation and confusion about what The Joint Commission (TJC) does and doesn't do, ICT went to TJC to find out. Listen to the detailed interview to find out what health care workers need to know.
How did first responders and firefighters navigate the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath? Two firefighters/EMTs describe what that time was like for them.
The proximity of sinks in patient zones may increase a patient’s risk of acquiring gram-negative hospital-acquired infections.
Bug of the Month helps educate readers about existing and emerging pathogens of clinical importance in health care facilities today.
As the third year of COVID-19 begins, some questions have been answered, but others still remain. ICT asked leaders in the infection prevention and control field what answers the medical world needs now.
Identifying the categories patients with staphylococcus aureus bacteremia fit into is in order to better care for them.
Health care-associated infection-reducing initiatives are vital to keeping patients safe.
A study clearly shows that surgical site infections (SSIs) can be reduced by changing surgical gloves and instruments before the closing abdominal wound closure.
New study shows home infusion therapy staff may have significant barriers to infection-surveillance training, and this could be leading to higher infection rates.
Saskia v. Popescu, PhD, MPH, MA, CIC, discusses the great news about Ebola in Uganda. She also covers COVID-19 news, and what it has to do with the Clash of the Titans.
Have the CDC and EPA given enough correct guidance on how to use cleaning products during the COVID-19 pandemic, or is it “fundamentally flawed”?
In this third installment of 3, Infection Control Today® continues the one father's story of how sepsis can enter central lines and how it affects the entire family.
The public expects infectious disease experts to know how to protect them—and themselves—from getting ill from infectious diseases, including COVID-19. So, what happens when the infectious disease specialist gets ill herself?
The CDC genomic surveillance found that the XBB.1.5 variant has increased from causing 1% to over 40% in only a month.
A recent study attempted to estimate the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 from humans to their pets and identify the risk factors, including food and water bowls and human-animal contact.
In this second installment of 3, Infection Control Today® continues a personal story of how sepsis can enter central lines and how it affects the entire family.
In this first installment of 3, Infection Control Today® presents a personal story of how sepsis can enter central lines, and how it affects the entire family.
Infection Control Today® talks to Shannon Simmons, DHSc, MPH, CIC, about her work with the APIC's Cleaning, Disinfection, Sterilization Conference and her position as an ambulatory infection preventionist.