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isolation

 
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Definition

Isolation refers to the precautions that are taken in the hospital to prevent the spread of an infectious agent from an infected or colonized patient to susceptible persons.

Description

Isolation practices can include placement in a private room or with a select roommate; the use of protective barriers such as masks, gowns and gloves; a special emphasis on handwashing (which is always very important); and special handling of contaminated articles. Because of the differences among infectious diseases, more than one of these precautions may be necessary to prevent spread of some diseases but may not be necessary for others.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Hospital Infection Control Practice Advisory Committee (HICPAC) have led the way in defining the guidelines for hospital-based infection precautions. The most current system recommended for use in hospitals consists of two levels of precautions. The first level is Standard Precautions, which apply to all patients at all times because signs and symptoms of infection are not always obvious and therefore may unknowingly pose a risk for a susceptible person. The second level is known as Transmission-Based Precautions, which are intended for individuals who have a known or suspected infection with certain organisms.

Frequently, patients are admitted to the hospital without a definite diagnosis, but with clues that suggest an infection. These patients should be isolated with the appropriate precautions until a definite diagnosis is made.

Standard Precautions

Standard Precautions define all the steps that should be taken to prevent spread of infection from person to person when there is an anticipated contact with:

  • blood
  • body fluids
  • secretions, such as phlegm
  • excretions, such as urine and feces (not including sweat), whether or not they contain visible blood
  • nonintact skin, such as an open wound
  • mucous membranes, such as the mouth cavity

Standard Precautions includes the use of one or of combinations of the following practices. The level of use will always depend on the nature of the anticipated contact with the patient:

  • handwashing, the most important infection control method
  • use of latex or other protective gloves
  • masks, eye protection and/or face shield
  • gowns
  • proper handling of soiled patient care equipment
  • proper environmental cleaning
  • minimal handling of soiled linen
  • proper disposal of needles and other sharp equipment such as scalpels
  • placement in a private room for patients who cannot maintain appropriate cleanliness or contain body fluids
Transmission-Based Precautions

Transmission-Based Precautions may be needed in addition to Standard Precautions for selected patients who are known or suspected to harbor certain infections. These precautions are divided into three categories that reflect the differences in the way infections are transmitted. Some diseases may require more than one isolation category.

AIRBORNE PRECAUTIONS. Airborne Precautions prevent diseases that are transmitted by minute particles called droplet nuclei or contaminated dust particles. These particles, can remain suspended in the air for long periods of time because of their size; even after the infected person has left the room. Some examples of diseases requiring these precautions are tuberculosis, measles, and chickenpox.

A patient needing Airborne Precautions should be assigned to a private room with special ventilation requirements. The door to this room must be closed at all possible times. If a patient must move from the isolation room to another area of the hospital, the patient should be wearing a mask during the transport. Anyone entering the isolation room to provide care to the patient must wear a special mask called a respirator.

DROPLET PRECAUTIONS. Droplet Precautions prevent the spread of organisms that travel on particles much larger than the droplet nuclei. These particles do not spend much time suspended in the air, and usually do not travel beyond a several-foot range from the patient. These particles are produced when a patient coughs, talks, or sneezes. Examples of diseases requiring droplet precautions are meningococcal meningitis (a serious bacterial infection of the lining of the brain), influenza, mumps, and German measles (rubella).

Patients who require Droplet Precautions should be placed in a private room or with a roommate who is infected with the same organism. The door to the room may remain open. Health care workers will need to wear masks within 3 ft of the patient. Patients moving about the hospital away from the isolation room should wear a mask.

CONTACT PRECAUTIONS. Contact Precautions prevent spread of organisms from an infected patient through direct (touching the patient) or indirect (touching surfaces or objects that that been in contact with the patient) contact. Examples of patients who might be placed in Contact Precautions are those infected with:

  • antibiotic-resistant bacteria
  • hepatitis A
  • scabies
  • impetigo
  • lice

This type of precaution requires the patient to be placed in a private room or with a roommate who has the same infection. Health care workers should wear gloves when entering the room. They should change their gloves if they touch material such as soiled dressings that contains large volumes of organisms. Prior to leaving the room, health care workers should remove the gloves and wash their hands with medicated soap. In addition, they may need to wear protective gowns if there is a chance of contact with potentially infective materials such as discharges from diarrhea or wound drainage that cannot be contained, or if there is likely to be extensive contact with the patient or environment.

Patient care items, such as a stethoscope, that are used for a patient in Contact Precautions should not be shared with other patients unless they are properly cleaned and disinfected before reuse. Patients should leave the isolation room infrequently.

— Suzanne M. Lutwick



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Dictionary: i·so·la·tion   (ī'sə-lā'shən) pronunciation
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n.
  1. The act of isolating.
  2. The quality or condition of being isolated. See synonyms at solitude.

Thesaurus: isolation
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noun

  1. The act or process of isolating: insulation, segregation, separation, sequestration. See include/exclude.
  2. The quality or state of being alone: aloneness, loneliness, singleness, solitariness, solitude. See include/exclude.

In epidemiology isolation refers to a procedure used in communicable disease control. It consists of a separation of cases (persons or animals) for a disease's period of communicability. The cases are isolated in a specific location and under conditions that minimize the risk of direct or indirect transmission of the infectious agents to those who may be susceptible. The American Public Health Association's Control of Communicable Diseases Manual, 17th edition, recommends "universal precautions" to prevent the transmission of blood-borne agents and strict hygienic measures such as thorough hand washing after attending to infectious cases and disinfection of articles that have been in contact with infectious cases.

The Centers for Disease Control's Guidelines for Isolation Precautions in Hospitals identifies several categories of isolation that are appropriate according to the mode of transmission of the infectious agent. Strict isolation is used for highly contagious or virulent infections in which the agent may be spread by direct contact or droplet. Procedures include segregation in a private room; use of gowns, masks, and gloves; and sometimes special ventilation. Contact isolation is used for less dangerous conditions spread by direct contact. Measures similar to strict isolation are employed, but more than one person may share a room and sometimes barrier nursing suffices. Respiratory isolation is used to prevent airborne transmission of infectious agents—it resembles contact isolation in that infectious patients may share a room. Tuberculosis isolation is used for patients known or suspected to be excreting tubercle bacilli in sputum. A private room with the door closed is required, as well as the same procedures used for contact and respiratory isolation and the use of respirator-type masks by all who enter the room. Gowns are used but gloves are unnecessary. Enteric precautions are used when the infectious agent is transmitted in feces. These precautions resemble contact isolation and include particular care in sanitary disposal of feces. Drainage/secretion precautions are used when patients are discharging purulent material, such as that from an abscess or other infected body site. A private room is not necessary, and gowns and gloves are indicated if attendants have to touch contaminated material.

(SEE ALSO: Barrier Nursing; Communicable Disease Control; Nosocomial Infections; Quarantine; Universal Precautions)

— JOHN M. LAST



Psychoanalysis: Isolation
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"Isolation" is the defense mechanism characteristic of obsessional neurosis. The links of a thought, idea, impression, or feeling with other thoughts or behaviors are broken by means of pauses, rituals, magical formulas, or other such devices.

In "The Neuro-Psychoses of Defense," Freud conceived of defense, in hysteria as well as in phobias and obsessions, as a form of isolation: "defense against the incompatible idea [is] effected by separating it from its affect; the idea itself [remains] in consciousness, even though weakened and isolated" (1894a, p. 58).

In the case of the "Rat Man," Freud wrote suggestively of "isolation" though still without naming it as a specific neurotic defense mechanism. He wrote that, in contradistinction to hysteria, in which amnesia attests to a successful repression, obsessional neurosis reveals that "[t]he infantile preconditions of the neurosis may be overtaken by amnesia, though this is often an incomplete one. . . . The trauma, instead of being forgotten, is deprived of its affective cathexis; so that what remains in consciousness is nothing but its ideational content, which is perfectly colourless and is judged to be unimportant" (Freud 1909d, pp. 105-106). Thus, in obsessional neurosis, "patients will endeavour to 'isolate' all such protective acts from other things" (p. 243).

In Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety (1926d), Freud returned to the analysis of isolation as a defense mechanism in obsessional neurosis—a view that Anna Freud would further develop in 1936—and he emphasized how isolation involves the "the taboo on touching" to the extent that it involves "removing the possibility of contact; it is a method of withdrawing a thing from being touched in any way. And when a neurotic isolates an impression or an activity by interpolating an interval, he is letting it be understood symbolically that he will not allow his thoughts about that impression or activity to come into associative contact with other thoughts" (pp. 121-122).

Bibliography

Freud, Anna. (1966). The ego and the mechanisms of defence. New York: International Universities Press.

Freud. Sigmund. (1894a). The neuro-psychoses of defence. SE 3: 41-61.

——. (1909d). Notes upon a case of obsessional neurosis. SE 10: 151-318.

——. (1926d). Inhibitions, symptoms and anxiety. SE 20: 75-172.

—ELSA SCHMID-KITSIKIS

Veterinary Dictionary: isolation
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The act of isolating or state of being isolated, such as (1) the physiological separation of a part, as by tissue culture or by interposition of inert material; (2) the segregation of patients with a communicable disease; (3) the successive propagation of a growth of microorganisms until a pure culture is obtained; (4) the chemical extraction of an unknown substance in pure form from a tissue.

  • i. technique — special precautionary measures and procedures used in the care of a patient with a communicable disease.
Quotes About: Isolation
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Quotes:

"Not only does democracy make every man forget his ancestors, but also clouds their view of their descendants and isolates them from their contemporaries. Each man is for ever thrown back on himself alone, and there is danger that he may be shut up in the solitude of his own heart." - Alexis De Tocqueville

"Life's an awfully lonesome affair. You come into the world alone and you go out of the world alone yet it seems to me you are more alone while living than even going and coming." - Emily Carr

"I am greatly pleased with the public, authentic isolation in which we two, you and I, now find ourselves. It is wholly in accord with our attitude and our principles." - Karl Marx

"We're all of us sentenced to solitary confinement inside our own skins, for life!" - Tennessee Williams

"National isolation breeds national neurosis." - Hubert H. Humphrey

"It isn't the oceans which cut us off from the world -- it's the American way of looking at things." - Henry Miller

See more famous quotes about Isolation

Wikipedia: Isolation (poker)
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In poker, an isolation play is usually a raise designed to encourage one or more players to fold, specifically for the purpose of making the hand a one-on-one contest with a specific opponent. For example, if an opponent raises and a player suspects he is bluffing, a player may reraise to pressure other opponents to fold, with the aim of getting heads up.

Isolation plays are most common against overly-aggressive players ("maniacs") who frequently play inferior hands, or with players who may have a drawing hand. Isolation plays are also common in tournaments to isolate a player who is "short stacked", that is, one who is in imminent danger of elimination, and so is likely to be playing aggressively out of desperation.

Isolating is encouraged when holding a hand that fares better heads up than in a multi-way pot. For instance, when a player has a small pocket pair he may raise a large amount simply to knock out other players because typically a small pocket pair is about 50 percent in a heads up situation, but worse when facing multiple opponents.

See also



Translations: Isolation
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - isolation, isolering, afsondring, udskillelse, adskillelse, rendyrkning

idioms:

  • in isolation    i isolation
  • isolation ward    epidemiafdeling

Nederlands (Dutch)
isolement

Français (French)
n. - isolement, solitude

idioms:

  • in isolation    dans l'isolement
  • isolation ward    (GB) salle des contagieux

Deutsch (German)
n. - Isolierung, Absonderung, Abgeschiedenheit

idioms:

  • in isolation    isoliert
  • isolation ward    Isolierstation

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - απομόνωση

idioms:

  • in isolation    σε απομόνωση
  • isolation ward    θάλαμος μεταδοτικών νοσημάτων

Italiano (Italian)
isolamento

idioms:

  • in isolation    in isolamento
  • isolation ward    reparto di isolamento

Português (Portuguese)
n. - isolação (f)

idioms:

  • in isolation    em isolamento (m)
  • isolation ward    pavilhão (m) de isolamento (em hospitais)

Русский (Russian)
изолирование, изолированность

idioms:

  • in isolation    в уединении
  • isolation ward    палата-изолятор

Español (Spanish)
n. - aislamiento, aislamiento por cuarentena

idioms:

  • in isolation    por separado, aislado, en cuarentena
  • isolation ward    sala de aislamiento, sala de infecciosos, en cuarentena

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - isolering

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
隔绝, 隔离, 孤立

idioms:

  • in isolation    孤立着, 脱离中
  • isolation ward    隔离病房

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 隔絕, 隔離, 孤立

idioms:

  • in isolation    孤立著, 脫離中
  • isolation ward    隔離病房

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 고립, 격리, 절연

idioms:

  • in isolation    고립하여

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 孤立, 分離

idioms:

  • in isolation    孤立して
  • isolation ward    隔離病室

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) عزله, انعزال‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮בידוד‬


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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Thesaurus. Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary Copyright © 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Encyclopedia of Public Health. Encyclopedia of Public Health. Copyright © 2002 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Psychoanalysis. International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Veterinary Dictionary. Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary 3rd Edition. Copyright © 2007 by D.C. Blood, V.P. Studdert and C.C. Gay, Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
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