Deck 3: The Laboratory Role in Infection Control

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Question
In an outbreak investigation and in the collection of routine surveillance data, what sorts of activities are critical?

A) Microbiologists' awareness of the processes that occur in a routine investigation
B) Alerting the public health department about potential outbreaks
C) Analyzing data on antimicrobial susceptibility from pathogens in the hospital so the health care providers understand the type of antimicrobials that must be used
D) Collecting, processing, reporting, and reviewing pertinent cultures
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Question
Organisms that represent public health concerns can be recovered from patients in an acute care hospital. All of the following isolates are considered significant or major public health concerns that are reportable to public health jurisdictions to follow up as a potential outbreak, except

A) Neisseria meningitis.
B) West Nile virus.
C) MRSA.
D) encephalitis viruses.
Question
What is pulsed-field gel electrophoresis?

A) The process of performing various environmental cultures to aid in infection control investigations
B) A strain-typing technique that can be an important adjunct to epidemiologic investigations
C) A culture technique that compares the two antibiograms of an isolate with the index case
D) A technique that checks for water quality
Question
Patients in both extended care facilities and home care settings are frequently immunosuppressed by disease or therapy and often need intravascular or other device-related care. The microbes identified in these patients are often opportunistic pathogens and include all the following, except

A) Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
B) Neisseria meningitis.
C) Candida.
D) Acinetobacter.
Question
Iatrogenic infections are commonly associated with

A) breaks in aseptic technique.
B) preexisting infections.
C) food-borne illness.
D) respiratory aerosol transmission.
Question
If a large statewide or worldwide epidemic occurs, one of the major difficulties is

A) collecting and transporting specimens from people who live out of state or around the world.
B) determining what organism is causing the outbreak.
C) arranging to get all the people with the infections to come back to the main area of the outbreak for an extended period.
D) making sure enough media and technologists are available to process the large amount of cultures associated with the outbreak investigation.
Question
Information that the microbiology laboratory can provide to infection control practitioners includes

A) the prevalence of a particular pathogen.
B) data on the effectiveness of handwashing techniques.
C) information about the outbreak of meningitis cases in the surrounding counties.
D) the antibiotic ordering patterns of particular physicians.
Question
An index case is

A) an epidemiologic curve for a particular pathogen.
B) the last case described in an outbreak.
C) the first case described in an outbreak.
D) the case where the number of infections with a particular organism rises above the baseline.
Question
When reviewing surgical site infections, the infection control practitioner must determine if the patient's infection is health care-associated by considering all the following, except

A) whether an endotracheal tube was present during surgery.
B) the length of surgery.
C) the degree of contamination of the surgical site (gunshot wound to the abdomen versus a hernia repair).
D) whether any breaks in surgical technique occurred.
Question
Prisoners or people housed in behavioral health facilities are more likely to contract infections with pathogens from their intimate contact with blood and body fluids. A likely pathogen may be

A) Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
B) Hepatitis C.
C) Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).
D) Clostridium difficile.
Question
An iatrogenic infection is one that

A) is caused by gram-negative bacteria.
B) occurs as a result of medical treatment.
C) is found in urinary tract infections.
D) is not subject to outbreak investigation.
Question
When an outbreak is suspected, all the following steps are taken in investigating that event, except

A) establishing a case definition.
B) confirming that an outbreak exists.
C) immediately treating all persons involved with appropriate antibiotic.
D) establishing an epidemiologic curve.
Question
A microbiology technologist is working at the bench and notices that a patient from the cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) grows a Klebsiella pneumoniae bacterium that is an extended-spectrum β\beta -lactamase-producing isolate. This technologist would advise the physician to

A) order any antimicrobial that is effective against gram-negative rods in general.
B) limit the use of antimicrobial agents that tend to induce the formation of extended-spectrum β\beta -lactamases.
C) draw more blood cultures, because the ones that grew that organism are contaminated.
D) be on the lookout for diarrhea.
Question
In acute care hospitals, transmission of pathogens as a result of treatment occurs as all the following "classifications" of infections, except

A) hand hygiene-acquired infections.
B) surgical site infections.
C) catheter-related bloodstream infections.
D) ventilator-associated pneumonias.
Question
An outbreak occurs when

A) numbers of isolates or infection rates increase significantly above the baseline.
B) numbers of isolates or infection rates decrease significantly below the baseline.
C) many people in a community are infected with a particular organism.
D) the mortality rate from a particular organism increases above 2%.
Question
This program involves a close watch of only specific, high-risk, high-volume procedures for nosocomial infections.

A) Baseline data
B) Total surveillance program
C) Targeted surveillance program
D) Data mining
Question
Organisms that are frequently encountered as causes of health care-associated infections in acute care settings include all the following organisms, except

A) MRSA.
B) enterococci.
C) Clostridium difficile.
D) Neisseria meningitis.
Question
The counties surrounding yours are seeing an increase in the number of whooping cough cases. This is important for the microbiology laboratory because

A) physicians may start sending these cases to you.
B) you will need to advise physicians to suspect such cases and to send them to the hospitals in the surrounding counties.
C) you need to make sure that the infection control practitioners in those counties have baseline data.
D) you need to educate health care providers on specimen collection and transportation, and have the specialized media ready so you can detect any cases in your county.
Question
This ongoing process helps public health and health care officials recognize outbreaks, upward trends of infections, and positive effects of interventions.

A) Handwashing techniques
B) Intervention
C) Surveillance
D) Antimicrobial resistance
Question
To keep abreast of all infections that occur in the hospital, infection control practitioners set up surveillance programs. These surveillance programs look at this parameter to determine if there are more or fewer infections in a given period.

A) Antimicrobial susceptibility reports
B) Infection rates
C) Handwashing rates
D) Glove usage
Question
Laboratory technologists must not only keep themselves educated in their contribution to the infection control team, they must keep

A) housekeeping alerted as to the nature of the microbiology laboratory's biohazardous waste.
B) laboratory management aware of equipment needs.
C) the infection control personnel educated regarding the laboratory's contribution to the team.
D) the Centers for CDC informed of the continuing education needs of the microbiology laboratory's staff.
Question
The hospital infection control committee will expect reports from the laboratory that deal with all the following, except

A) antibiograms.
B) water contamination rates.
C) blood culture contamination rates.
D) pathogens recovered in certain hospital units.
Question
What types of activities have led to the emergence of the microbiology laboratory as the forefront in keeping Americans safe?

A) Terrorist
B) Research
C) Military
D) Educational
Question
This is practiced throughout the hospital and mandates safety for all personnel when handling blood and body fluids.

A) Biosafety level 2
B) Handwashing
C) Wearing of respirators
D) Standard Precautions
Question
Waterborne illnesses that may be associated with contaminated drinking water or recreation water include all the following, except

A) legionellosis.
B) hepatitis A.
C) Pseudomonas skin infection.
D) hepatitis B.
Question
An example of an emerging disease is

A) influenza.
B) West Nile virus.
C) malaria.
D) chicken pox.
Question
The role of the microbiology laboratory is to perform cultures and provide culture results to health care providers. The microbiology laboratory also has the responsibility to

A) report the identification or suspicion of certain infectious diseases to local, state, and federal public health entities.
B) report any bioterrorism findings to the news media.
C) report odd infectious diseases to the CDC.
D) report any bioterrorism finding to the police.
Question
Although environmental cultures are not usually performed because the environment is rarely implicated in disease transmission, they occasionally are useful. Samples will be taken from all of the following, except

A) air.
B) water.
C) hands.
D) surfaces.
Question
In the United States, 46 outbreaks annually owing to waterborne pathogens cause this illness and affect several thousand people.

A) Diarrhea
B) Hepatitis C
C) Naegleria
D) Legionnaires' disease
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Deck 3: The Laboratory Role in Infection Control
1
In an outbreak investigation and in the collection of routine surveillance data, what sorts of activities are critical?

A) Microbiologists' awareness of the processes that occur in a routine investigation
B) Alerting the public health department about potential outbreaks
C) Analyzing data on antimicrobial susceptibility from pathogens in the hospital so the health care providers understand the type of antimicrobials that must be used
D) Collecting, processing, reporting, and reviewing pertinent cultures
D
2
Organisms that represent public health concerns can be recovered from patients in an acute care hospital. All of the following isolates are considered significant or major public health concerns that are reportable to public health jurisdictions to follow up as a potential outbreak, except

A) Neisseria meningitis.
B) West Nile virus.
C) MRSA.
D) encephalitis viruses.
C
3
What is pulsed-field gel electrophoresis?

A) The process of performing various environmental cultures to aid in infection control investigations
B) A strain-typing technique that can be an important adjunct to epidemiologic investigations
C) A culture technique that compares the two antibiograms of an isolate with the index case
D) A technique that checks for water quality
B
4
Patients in both extended care facilities and home care settings are frequently immunosuppressed by disease or therapy and often need intravascular or other device-related care. The microbes identified in these patients are often opportunistic pathogens and include all the following, except

A) Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
B) Neisseria meningitis.
C) Candida.
D) Acinetobacter.
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Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Iatrogenic infections are commonly associated with

A) breaks in aseptic technique.
B) preexisting infections.
C) food-borne illness.
D) respiratory aerosol transmission.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
If a large statewide or worldwide epidemic occurs, one of the major difficulties is

A) collecting and transporting specimens from people who live out of state or around the world.
B) determining what organism is causing the outbreak.
C) arranging to get all the people with the infections to come back to the main area of the outbreak for an extended period.
D) making sure enough media and technologists are available to process the large amount of cultures associated with the outbreak investigation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Information that the microbiology laboratory can provide to infection control practitioners includes

A) the prevalence of a particular pathogen.
B) data on the effectiveness of handwashing techniques.
C) information about the outbreak of meningitis cases in the surrounding counties.
D) the antibiotic ordering patterns of particular physicians.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
An index case is

A) an epidemiologic curve for a particular pathogen.
B) the last case described in an outbreak.
C) the first case described in an outbreak.
D) the case where the number of infections with a particular organism rises above the baseline.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
When reviewing surgical site infections, the infection control practitioner must determine if the patient's infection is health care-associated by considering all the following, except

A) whether an endotracheal tube was present during surgery.
B) the length of surgery.
C) the degree of contamination of the surgical site (gunshot wound to the abdomen versus a hernia repair).
D) whether any breaks in surgical technique occurred.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Prisoners or people housed in behavioral health facilities are more likely to contract infections with pathogens from their intimate contact with blood and body fluids. A likely pathogen may be

A) Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
B) Hepatitis C.
C) Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).
D) Clostridium difficile.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
An iatrogenic infection is one that

A) is caused by gram-negative bacteria.
B) occurs as a result of medical treatment.
C) is found in urinary tract infections.
D) is not subject to outbreak investigation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
When an outbreak is suspected, all the following steps are taken in investigating that event, except

A) establishing a case definition.
B) confirming that an outbreak exists.
C) immediately treating all persons involved with appropriate antibiotic.
D) establishing an epidemiologic curve.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
A microbiology technologist is working at the bench and notices that a patient from the cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) grows a Klebsiella pneumoniae bacterium that is an extended-spectrum β\beta -lactamase-producing isolate. This technologist would advise the physician to

A) order any antimicrobial that is effective against gram-negative rods in general.
B) limit the use of antimicrobial agents that tend to induce the formation of extended-spectrum β\beta -lactamases.
C) draw more blood cultures, because the ones that grew that organism are contaminated.
D) be on the lookout for diarrhea.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In acute care hospitals, transmission of pathogens as a result of treatment occurs as all the following "classifications" of infections, except

A) hand hygiene-acquired infections.
B) surgical site infections.
C) catheter-related bloodstream infections.
D) ventilator-associated pneumonias.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
An outbreak occurs when

A) numbers of isolates or infection rates increase significantly above the baseline.
B) numbers of isolates or infection rates decrease significantly below the baseline.
C) many people in a community are infected with a particular organism.
D) the mortality rate from a particular organism increases above 2%.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
This program involves a close watch of only specific, high-risk, high-volume procedures for nosocomial infections.

A) Baseline data
B) Total surveillance program
C) Targeted surveillance program
D) Data mining
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Organisms that are frequently encountered as causes of health care-associated infections in acute care settings include all the following organisms, except

A) MRSA.
B) enterococci.
C) Clostridium difficile.
D) Neisseria meningitis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The counties surrounding yours are seeing an increase in the number of whooping cough cases. This is important for the microbiology laboratory because

A) physicians may start sending these cases to you.
B) you will need to advise physicians to suspect such cases and to send them to the hospitals in the surrounding counties.
C) you need to make sure that the infection control practitioners in those counties have baseline data.
D) you need to educate health care providers on specimen collection and transportation, and have the specialized media ready so you can detect any cases in your county.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
This ongoing process helps public health and health care officials recognize outbreaks, upward trends of infections, and positive effects of interventions.

A) Handwashing techniques
B) Intervention
C) Surveillance
D) Antimicrobial resistance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
To keep abreast of all infections that occur in the hospital, infection control practitioners set up surveillance programs. These surveillance programs look at this parameter to determine if there are more or fewer infections in a given period.

A) Antimicrobial susceptibility reports
B) Infection rates
C) Handwashing rates
D) Glove usage
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Laboratory technologists must not only keep themselves educated in their contribution to the infection control team, they must keep

A) housekeeping alerted as to the nature of the microbiology laboratory's biohazardous waste.
B) laboratory management aware of equipment needs.
C) the infection control personnel educated regarding the laboratory's contribution to the team.
D) the Centers for CDC informed of the continuing education needs of the microbiology laboratory's staff.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The hospital infection control committee will expect reports from the laboratory that deal with all the following, except

A) antibiograms.
B) water contamination rates.
C) blood culture contamination rates.
D) pathogens recovered in certain hospital units.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
What types of activities have led to the emergence of the microbiology laboratory as the forefront in keeping Americans safe?

A) Terrorist
B) Research
C) Military
D) Educational
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
This is practiced throughout the hospital and mandates safety for all personnel when handling blood and body fluids.

A) Biosafety level 2
B) Handwashing
C) Wearing of respirators
D) Standard Precautions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Waterborne illnesses that may be associated with contaminated drinking water or recreation water include all the following, except

A) legionellosis.
B) hepatitis A.
C) Pseudomonas skin infection.
D) hepatitis B.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
An example of an emerging disease is

A) influenza.
B) West Nile virus.
C) malaria.
D) chicken pox.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The role of the microbiology laboratory is to perform cultures and provide culture results to health care providers. The microbiology laboratory also has the responsibility to

A) report the identification or suspicion of certain infectious diseases to local, state, and federal public health entities.
B) report any bioterrorism findings to the news media.
C) report odd infectious diseases to the CDC.
D) report any bioterrorism finding to the police.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Although environmental cultures are not usually performed because the environment is rarely implicated in disease transmission, they occasionally are useful. Samples will be taken from all of the following, except

A) air.
B) water.
C) hands.
D) surfaces.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In the United States, 46 outbreaks annually owing to waterborne pathogens cause this illness and affect several thousand people.

A) Diarrhea
B) Hepatitis C
C) Naegleria
D) Legionnaires' disease
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
locked card icon
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 29 flashcards in this deck.