Appendix 2: Terminology

Infrastructure and Routine Practices for Occupational Infection Prevention and Control Services (2019)

At a glance

Appendix 2: Terminology from the Infrastructure and Routine Practices for Occupational Infection Prevention and Control Services (2019) guideline.

Glossary of Terms

Healthcare Organization (HCO)

HCO refers to a system comprised of people, facilities, and resources that deliver healthcare services to patients.

Healthcare Personnel (HCP)

HCP refers to all paid and unpaid persons serving in healthcare settings who have the potential for direct or indirect exposure to patients or infectious materials, including body substances (e.g., blood, tissue, and specific body fluids); contaminated medical supplies, devices, and equipment; contaminated environmental surfaces; or contaminated air. These HCP may include, but are not limited to, emergency medical service personnel, nurses, nursing assistants, physicians, technicians, therapists, phlebotomists, pharmacists, students and trainees, contractual staff not employed by the health care facility, and persons (e.g., clerical, dietary, environmental services, laundry, security, maintenance, engineering and facilities management, administrative, billing, and volunteer personnel) not directly involved in patient care but potentially exposed to infectious agents that can be transmitted among from HCP and patients. For this update, HCP does not include dental healthcare personnel, autopsy personnel, and laboratory personnel, as recommendations to address occupational infection prevention and control (IPC) services for these personnel are posted elsewhere123.

Healthcare Settings

Healthcare settings refers to places where healthcare is delivered and includes, but is not limited to, acute care facilities, long term acute care facilities, inpatient rehabilitation facilities, nursing homes and assisted living facilities, home healthcare, vehicles where healthcare is delivered (e.g., mobile clinics), and outpatient facilities, such as dialysis centers, physician offices, and others.

Occupational Health Services (OHS)

OHS refers to the group, department, or program that addresses many aspects of health and safety in the workplace for HCP, including the provision of clinical services for work-related injuries, exposures, and illnesses. In healthcare settings, OHS addresses workplace hazards including communicable diseases; slips, trips and falls; patient handling injuries; chemical exposures; HCP burnout; and workplace violence. In this document, the term OHS is used synonymously with “Employee Health,” “Employee Health Services,” “Employee Health and Safety,” “Occupational Health,” and other such programs.

Occupational Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) Services

IPC services refers to a subset of services provided by occupational health services for preventing the transmission of infectious illnesses in the workplace.

Performance Measures

Performance measures refer to objective, quantitative indicators of various aspects of the performance of a program. They can focus on different aspects of performance, such as effectiveness, efficiency, productivity, cost effectiveness, or customer satisfaction4.

Presenteeism

Presenteeism refers to the act of attending work while ill and potentially infectious to others.

Quality Improvement

Safety culture of an organization refers to the product of individual and group values, attitudes, perceptions, competencies, and patterns of behavior that determine the commitment to an organization’s health and safety management.

Sick Leave

Sick leave refers to absence from the workplace to address health needs, such as illness.

Sharps with Engineered Sharps Injury Protection (SESIP)

SESIP refers to devices with integrated features to prevent percutaneous injuries. In this document, the term SESIP is synonymous with Sharps with Injury Prevention features; safety-engineered devices; safety-engineered sharps; safety-engineered sharps devices; safer devices; safer medical devices; and protected sharp devices.

Acronyms and Abbreviations

ACIP Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices

ACOEM American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine

ADA Americans with Disabilities Act

B. pertussis Bordetella pertussis

BMBL Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories

CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

CLIA Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments

CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

CoP Conditions of Participation

CSF Cerebrospinal Fluid

DHQP Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion

EHR Electronic Health Record

FDA Food and Drug Administration

FMLA Family and Medical Leave Act (of 1993)

GAS Group A Streptococcus

HCO Healthcare Organization

HCP Healthcare Personnel

HICPAC Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee

HIPPA Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act

HIV Human Immunodeficiency Virus

IDSA Infectious Diseases Society of America

IIS Immunization Information Systems

IPC Infection Prevention and Control

IV Intravenous

LP Lumbar Puncture

NHSN National Healthcare Safety Network

NIOSH National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

N. meningitidis Neisseria meningitidis

OHS Occupational Health Services

OSHA Occupational Safety and Health Administration

PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction

PEP Postexposure Prophylaxis

PPE Personal Protective Equipment

PPME Pre-Placement Medical Evaluation

RADT Rapid Antigen Detection Test

RT Reverse Transcription

SESIP Sharps with Engineered Sharps Injury Protection

SHEA Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America

STSS/td> Streptococcal Toxic-Shock Syndrome

TB Tuberculosis

Tdap Tetanus, Diphtheria, Pertussis

TMP-SMZ Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole

  1. Kohn WG, Harte JA, Malvitz DM, et al. Guidelines for infection control in dental health-care settings–2003. MMWR Recomm Rep 2003 Dec 19;52(RR-17):1-61.
  2. Miller JM, Astles R, Baszler T, et al; Biosafety Blue Ribbon Panel. Guidelines for safe work practices in human and animal medical diagnostic laboratories. Recommendations of a CDC-convened, Biosafety Blue Ribbon Panel [Erratum appears in MMWR Surveill Summ. 2012 Mar 30;61(12):214]. MMWR Suppl. 2012 Jan 6;61(1)1-102.
  3. Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories, 5th edition. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institutes of Health. HHS Publication No. (CDC) 21-1112. Effective December 2009. Reviewed October 24, 2018. Accessed August 20, 2019.
  4. Poister TH. Measuring Performance in Public and Nonprofit Organizations. Ann Arbor, MI: Wiley; 2003.
  • Riley WJ, Moran JW, Corso LC, et al. Defining quality improvement in public health. J Public Health Manag Pract. 2010 Jan-Feb;16(1):5-7.