Hanson P J, Jeffries D J, Batten J C, Collins J V
Brompton Hospital, London.
BMJ. 1988 Jul 16;297(6642):185-7. doi: 10.1136/bmj.297.6642.185.
The emergence of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome has provoked a widespread review of policies for infection control. Incomplete knowledge about the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B virus, and mycobacteria has until now been compensated for by adopting "overkill" precautions for patients who were thought to harbour these organisms. This policy is no longer tenable, given the difficulty in identifying infected patients. The control of infection in hospitals must instead be based on the routine use of high standards of hygiene that are adequate to contain all pathogens. Attempts by bronchoscopists to formulate such a policy have been frustrated by the lack of a suitable disinfectant and by ignorance of the susceptibility of microorganisms to cleaning and disinfection in a clinical environment.
获得性免疫缺陷综合征的出现引发了对感染控制政策的广泛审视。迄今为止,由于对人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)、乙型肝炎病毒和分枝杆菌的认识不全面,对于被认为携带这些病原体的患者采取了“过度防护”措施来弥补这一不足。鉴于难以识别受感染患者,这一政策已不再可行。相反,医院的感染控制必须基于常规采用足以控制所有病原体的高标准卫生措施。由于缺乏合适的消毒剂以及对临床环境中微生物对清洁和消毒的敏感性认识不足,支气管镜检查人员制定此类政策的努力受挫。