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Volume 5, Issue 7 (Suppl)

J Infect Dis Ther, an open access journal

ISSN: 2332-0877

Infection Prevention 2017

December 14-15, 2017

Page 16

conference

series

.com

December 14-15, 2017 | Rome, Italy

13

th

World Congress on

INFECTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL

Waleed A Mazi, J Infect Dis Ther 2017, 5:7(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2332-0877-C1-034

Strategies in developing an effective infection prevention and control program

I

nfection prevention and control programs involve everyone; the patient, healthcare workers, and visitors. In order to

maintain a health and safe environment, any effective strategy must understand that you are dealing with people with

different languages, religions, nationalities and cultural attitudes. Therefore, preventionists should have an effective ability

to communicate new skills, and to encourage and motivate people involved. Plus, an ability to address issues and flawed

implementation habits that have formed historically within the organization. Based onmy local experience in Taif, Saudi Arabia,

organizations should believe strongly in their value systems and in their appropriate standards in the clinical environment.

These rules should become not just guidelines but organizational law. Zero tolerance of healthcare associated infections can

be achievable for MOH hospitals by following the SHEA/IDSA practice guidelines and setting them as applicable standards

or laws. For example, we observed 60% reduction of central-line associated bloodstream infection and achieved to NHSN

50 percentile of catheter associated urinary tract infections in 2012. Also, there is increasing evidence, that international or

national accreditation programs can play a vital role in healthcare service improvement. Infection control auditing compliance

rate results in hospital standards on infection control have increased from 76% to 86% during 2017.

Biography

Waleed AMazi is a regional Director for Infection Prevention and Control, King Abdul Aziz Specialist Hospital, Taif – Saudi Arabia. He also worked in Philosophy of Medical

Science, Clinical Microbiology, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden. He has published international articles on prevention of central line –associated bloodstream infection, WHO-

Hand Hygiene implementation program, prevention sharp injuries in healthcare settings and molecular genotyping for epidemiological purposes and participated as a

poster and oral presenters in many international conferences.

wmazi@moh.gov.sa

Waleed A Mazi

Directorate of Health Affairs, Taif, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia