Hot Topics in Infection Prevention: Thank You, My Fellow Infection Preventionists
I want to acknowledge [infection preventionists]. You all inspire me daily and I’m eternally grateful to work among you. We work to protect our health care personnel and patients fiercely and often to the point where we are burned out.
Earlier this week I was talking to a colleague in infection prevention. Exhausted to our core and with that
This got me thinking. COVID-19 has put a light on so much that we’ve been neglecting for so long – the hard work of essential workers, social and racial inequities, underserved areas and understaffed hospitals, underfunded public health, etc. There’s been much written on the role of
I’ve spent a lot of time
We operationalize new guidance, relayed travel-related alerts, and prepared staff for what may come. When the surges hit, we were there—rounding on the units and doing training on all the units. From being trained to do N95 fit-testing to jumping into the count to partake in patient care, IPs took on many roles.
We had to navigate the changing guidance, establish overflow areas, ensure reporting to the health department was occurring, and do contact-tracing to make sure exposed staff were quarantined. We had to navigate PPE shortages and decontamination of masks. We faced politicization of masks and hesitancy around vaccines.
We’ve been attacked by people who didn’t understand our approach to isolation precautions. In the non-surging times, we were expected to go back to normal. To go back to the health care-associated infections (HAIs) that were being neglected but also to maintain readiness. Coming down from that exhausted panic of “just keep going” is not easy.
For most IPs, we work five days a week in under-staff programs and are frequently on call. Readiness for an infectious disease tends to fall on us and it’s our job to coordinate with all the internal partners—like clinical, lab, and environmental services—to ensure we’re prepared.
As COVID-19 began to surge across the world and the United States in 2020, IPs went into overtime, working continuously … and we haven’t stopped. Like public health, we’ve worked long weeks, weekends on call, and have been expected to manage our day-to-day duties.
In the wake of all of this and the
Many may not know the dedication we put in during this all but please know, our patients and staff are safer due to the work you do daily. Now is the time we try to pick up the pieces—care for the caregiver, right? Working through this challenging time won’t be quick but know that you’re not alone. Infection prevention is a critical field and like public health, it often is neglected until it’s necessary. Just know that you played (and continue to do so) a vital role in the COVID-19 response and as we work to raise awareness for our field, this is the time to revitalize and shape the future of infection prevention. This means we need new ideas, innovative approaches, but most importantly—we need you to recover and heal. We still have a long road ahead but surrounded by some of the best people one could hope for, I know infection prevention will be OK.
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