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Infection Control and Instrument Sterility for Minor Surgery

"A practice may be accepted for the provision of directed enhanced services (DES) if it has a partner, employee or sub-contractor, who has the necessary skills and experience to carry out the contracted procedures in line with the principles of the generic GPs with special interests (GpwSI) guidance1 or the specific examples as they are developed."2

Since the new general practitioner contract, treatments under directed enhanced services have been priced depending on complexity of procedure, involvement of other staff and use of specialised equipment. The PCO agree the basis on which the DES will be funded in light of the procedures to be carried out and the volume to be carried out, including setting an upper limit for budget. Procedures may include:

  • Joint or soft tissue injections
  • Aspirations
  • Incisions
  • Excisions
  • Curetting
  • Cautery
  • Cryotherapy3
Eligibility to provide the service
  • Clinicians taking part in minor surgery should be competent in resuscitation and, as for other areas of clinical practice, have a responsibility for ensuring that their skills are regularly updated.
  • Registered nurses can provide care and support to patients undergoing minor surgery.2
  • Nurses assisting in minor surgery procedures should be appropriately trained and competent, taking into consideration their professional accountability and the Nursing and Midwifery Council guidelines on the scope of professional practice.
  • The practices should have such facilities as are necessary to enable them properly to provide minor surgery services. National guidance on premises standards has been issued. (Department of Health. Health building note 46: General medical practice premises. London: Department of Health.)
  • Adequate and appropriate equipment should be available for the doctor to undertake the procedures chosen, and should also include appropriate equipment for resuscitation.
  • Practices must ensure that details of the patient's minor surgery procedure is included in his or her lifelong record.
  • If the patient is not registered with the practice, then the practice must send this information to the patient's registered practice for inclusion in the patient notes.
Audit

Full records of all procedures should be maintained in such a way that aggregated data and details of individual patients are readily accessible. Practices should regularly audit and peer-review minor surgery work. Possible topics for audit include:

  • Clinical outcomes
  • Rates of infection
  • Unexpected or incomplete excision of basal cell tumours or pigmented lesions (which following histological examination are found to be malignant)
Sterilisation and infection control2

Minor surgery in general practice has a low incidence of complications.
It is important that practices providing minor surgery operate to the highest possible standards.
To maintain high standards practices should:

  • Have approved sterilisation procedures that reflect national guidelines
  • Obtain sterile packs from the local CSSD
  • Use disposable sterile instruments

Sterilising equipment should be maintained regularly. The practice must have an infection control policy, which covers excised specimens, the disposal of clinical waste and the handling of used instruments.

Infection control guidelines4

The recommendations are divided into three broad recommendation headings:

  • Hand hygiene: hands must be decontaminated immediately before each and every episode of direct patient contact or care and after any activity or contact that could potentially result in hands becoming contaminated.
  • The use of personal protective equipment: gloves must be worn as single-use items. They must be put on immediately before an episode of patient contact or treatment and removed as soon as the activity is completed. Gloves must be changed between caring for different patients, and between different care or treatment activities for the same patient. In a recent study only 33.1% GPs reported wearing gloves during minor operations.5
  • The safe use and disposal of sharps.
Decontamination

The DOH states that "All instruments that are used in the clinical environment should be decontaminated without exception."6

It is not acceptable that only instruments that have direct patient contact should be cleaned. Thermal dis-infection i.e. by moist heat, is the method of choice for all instruments that have direct patient contact and are not heat sensitive or disposable.
Basic requirements for a good decontamination process:7

  • An effective management control system is in place covering all aspects of the decontamination cycle
  • Appropriate facilities are provided
  • Appropriate equipment is utilised which is:
    • Fit for purpose
    • Properly maintained and calibrated
    • Properly monitored and validated
  • Staff are properly trained and supervised
  • Single use medical devices are not reused
  • Records of decontamination are kept



Document references
  1. RCGP. Useful Links: GPs with Special Interests (GPwSIs).
  2. BMA - Minor surgery - Specification for a directed enhanced service.
  3. Kuwahara R; Cryotherapy. eMedicine, November 2007.
  4. Infection control, Prevention of healthcare-associated infection in primary and community care, NICE (2003).
  5. Coulter WA, Chew-Graham CA, Cheung SW, et al; Autoclave performance and operator knowledge of autoclave use in primary care: a survey of UK practices. J Hosp Infect. 2001 Jul;48(3):180-5. [abstract]
  6. Dept.of Health; The Health Act 2006: Code of Practice for the Prevention and Contol of Healthcare Associated Infections.
  7. SEHD; Scottish Executive Health Department Working Group - decontamination process. 2001.

Internet and further reading Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr Hayley Willacy for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2008.
DocID: 603
Document Version: 21
DocRef: bgp24534
Last Updated: 1 Jun 2008
Review Date: 1 Jun 2010












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PS - Health and Poverty

Perhaps the biggest cause of ill health in the world is poverty. Help to Make Poverty History. For example, why not lend some of your money to disadvantaged communities to enable them to trade their way out of poverty through schemes such as Shared Interest.

See also MAKEPOVERTYHISTORY North East for details and links to campaigns against poverty.

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