Notice:ā |
āThis AFL has been superseded. Please refer to AFL 18-08. |
Influenza activity is high and rapidly increasing in California. CDPH has received numerous reports of influenza outbreaks in health care facilities, particularly in LTCFs. These outbreaks can have broad impacts across the continuum of care when LTCFs are not accepting new admissions or readmissions of residents who were hospitalized for influenza. LTCFs should be prepared to provide care safely without putting residents at risk during influenza season.
Infection control measures for LTCF residents with suspected or confirmed influenza include standard and droplet precautions. Implementation of droplet precautions in LTCF includes (but is not limited to):
- Placement of ill residents in a private room. If a private room is not available, residents suspected of having influenza can be cohorted with one another.
- Spatial separation of > 3 feet and drawing the curtain between beds for residents housed in multi-bed rooms.
- Health care workers wear a facemask (e.g., surgical or procedure mask) upon entering the residentās room, and remove the facemask when leaving the residentās room and dispose of it in a waste container.
- If resident movement or transport is necessary, the resident wears a facemask (e.g., surgical or procedure mask), if possible.
- Communication of information about residents with suspected, probable, or confirmed influenza to appropriate health care personnel before transferring them to other departments or facilities.
Additional measures to reduce transmission risk include having symptomatic residents stay in their own rooms as much as possible, including restriction from common activities and having all their meals served in their room. Employees and visitors should be screened for illness. Ill health care personnel should be furloughed and ill visitors discouraged from entering the facility.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) infection control guidance for influenza recommends droplet precautions be continued for 7 days after illness onset or until 24 hours after the resolution of fever and respiratory symptoms, whichever is longer, while a patient is in a health care facility. CDC also recommends, "patients under droplet precautions should be discharged from medical care when clinically appropriate, not based on the period of potential virus shedding or recommended duration of droplet precautions." LTCF should develop plans to be able to implement droplet precautions if necessary for returning residents who were hospitalized with influenza and are clinically ready for discharge from the acute care setting.
The CDC guidelines and recommendations entitled "Prevention Strategies for Seasonal Influenza in Healthcare Settings" are available at:
CDC Prevention Strategies
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/professionals/infectioncontrol/healthcaresettings.htm
If a facility is experiencing an influenza outbreak, CDC recommendations include:
- Daily active surveillance,
- Standard and droplet precautions for all residents with suspected or confirmed influenza,
- Prompt initiation of antiviral treatment and chemoprophylaxis in accordance with guidelines, and
- Avoiding new admissions or transfers to units with symptomatic residents.
CDPH also recommends LTCF ensure new or returning residents do not have acute respiratory illness and admit them only to unaffected units of the facility. A returning resident who was hospitalized with influenza and is clinically appropriate for discharge from the acute care setting is past the acute phase of illness although may still need to be on droplet precautions.
LTCF should consult with their local health department (LHD) to determine strategies for limiting admissions during an influenza outbreak while maintaining capacity to safely care for other residents. The duration of limitations on admissions should be determined on a case-by-case basis in consultation with the LHD. Considerations may include appropriate implementation of control measures including chemoprophylaxis of non-ill residents, and the identification of no additional cases during active surveillance. Prolonged closures to all admissions might not be necessary if transmission appears to be controlled and there are unaffected units available where new admissions could be placed.
The CDC guidelines and recommendations entitled "Interim Guidance for Influenza Outbreak Management in Long-Term Care Facilities" are available at:
CDC Interim Guidance
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/professionals/infectioncontrol/ltc-facility-guidance.htm
CDPH "Recommendations for the Prevention and Control of Influenza ā California Long-Term Care Facilities" (Revised October 2016) are available at:
https://www.cdph.ca.gov/Programs/CHCQ/HAI/CDPH%20Document%20Library/RecommendationsForThePreventionAndControlOfInfluenzaOct2016.pdf
Sincerely,
Original signed by Jean Iacino
Jean Iacino
Deputy Director