Chain of Infection Components
The chain of components has six sections. They include:
- Microorganisms: Disease producing, also called pathogens
- Virus, parasite, fungus, bacterium
- Risk factors: Virulence, pathogenicity, ability to enter host
- Reservoir/Source: Environment/habitat where a pathogen can live and multiply
- Environmental surfaces/equipment, body fluids (blood, saliva), urine/fecal material, food/water, soil, skin, respiratory tract
- Portal of Exit: How the pathogen exits or leaves reservoir
- Skin to skin, skin to surface, blood, mucous membranes, oral cavity, fecal
- Other potentially infectious material (OPIM): Seminal fluid, joint fluid, saliva, urine/fecal material, any body fluid contaminated with blood
- Modes of Transport: How a pathogen moves from reservoir to susceptible host
- Direct Transmission: Airborne, droplet, contact (e.g., skin), bite, needlestick or other sharps injury
- Indirect Transmission: Fomites – contaminated equipment or medication (multidose vials, single dose vials), vectors, food, water
- Portal of Entry: Opening where the pathogen may enter
- Body openings (e.g., mouth, eyes, urinary tract, respiratory tract), incisions, wounds
- Susceptible Host: The person at-risk: patient or healthcare worker
- Factors affecting susceptibility (e.g., age, health, co-morbidities, immune system, nutrition, infective dose, medications)