Lesson 1 — Infection Control

Half A·HLT420A·Kinn's Ch 4·NHA: Infection Control & Safety 10%

Source

All procedural steps and PURPOSE rationales below are verbatim from MedCerts HLT420A Storyline modules L01-01 through L01-04. Reference textbook: Niedzwiecki & Pepper, Kinn's The Clinical Medical Assistant, 15th ed., Chapter 4. No outside material added.

Learning Objectives — NHA-aligned
High-yield concept · NHA exam staple

The Chain of Infection

Every infection requires six links joined into a chain. Break any one link and transmission stops — that's the entire premise of standard precautions, hand hygiene, PPE, and isolation.

🧠
Mnemonic: "Awesome Rad Eagles Tackle Every Hostile (foe)"Agent · Reservoir · Exit · Transmission · Entry · Host. On the NHA exam, expect questions about which link a specific intervention breaks (e.g. hand-washing breaks transmission; vaccinations harden the host).
Module L01-01 · Procedural skill

Glove Removal

Goal: To minimize exposure to pathogens by aseptically removing and discarding contaminated gloves.

Equipment
  • Disposable examination gloves
  • Biohazard waste container with labeled red biohazard bag
  1. With the dominant hand, grasp the glove of the opposite hand near the palm and begin removing the first glove. The arms should be held away from the body with the hands pointed down.
    Purpose

    Holding the hands down and away from the body helps prevent possible contamination.

  2. Pull the glove inside out. After removal, ball it into the palm of the remaining gloved hand.
    Purpose

    Taking off the glove inside out prevents transmission of pathogens to another surface.

  3. Insert two fingers of the ungloved hand between the edge of the cuff of the other contaminated glove and the hand. Push the glove down the hand, inside out, over the contaminated glove being held; leaving the contaminated side of both gloves on the inside.
    Purpose

    This technique protects the wearer from the contaminated surfaces of both gloves.

  4. Properly dispose of the inside-out, contaminated gloves in a biohazard waste container.
    Purpose

    To prevent the spread of infection.

  5. Perform a medical aseptic hand-washing, or sanitize the hands with an alcohol-based rub.
    Purpose

    To minimize the number of pathogens on the hands, thereby reducing the number of transient flora and the risk of transmission of pathogens.

Module L01-02 · Procedural skill

Aseptic Handwashing

Goal: To minimize the number of pathogens on the hands, thus reducing the risk of transmission of pathogens.

Equipment
  • Sink with warm running water
  • Antimicrobial liquid soap in a dispenser (bar soap is not acceptable)
  • Disposable nail brush or orange stick
  • Paper towels in a dispenser
  • Water-based antimicrobial lotion
  • Covered waste container with foot pedal
  1. Remove all jewelry. Exception: a wristwatch, if it can be pulled up above your wrist.
    Purpose

    Jewelry can harbor microorganisms.

  2. Turn the faucet on using a paper towel. Regulate the water temperature to lukewarm.
    Purpose

    Use a paper towel to prevent touching of contaminated surfaces. Water that is too hot can cause skin to become dry and chapped.

  3. Wet hands, apply soap, and lather using a circular motion, with friction, while holding fingertips downward. Rub well between fingers. If first hand wash of the day, use a nail brush or orange stick and clean under every fingernail. Inspect nails thoroughly.
    Purpose

    Friction removes soil and contaminants from the hands and wrists.

  4. Rinse well, holding hands so that water flows from wrists downward to fingertips.
    Purpose

    Soil and contaminants will wash off the skin and down the drain.

  5. If first hand wash of the day or hands are obviously contaminated, wet hands again and repeat scrubbing using a vigorous, circular motion over wrists and hands for at least 1 to 2 minutes.
    Purpose

    Time is required for friction and motion to eliminate all possible soil and contaminants.

  6. Rinse hands a second time, again holding hands so that water flows from wrists downward toward fingertips.
    Purpose

    To ensure removal of all transient flora.

  7. Dry hands with paper towels. Do not touch the paper towel dispenser as you obtain towels.
    Purpose

    Touching the dispenser contaminates your hands, and you will need to start over.

  8. If faucets are not foot operated, turn them off with a paper towel.
    Purpose

    The faucet is dirty and will contaminate your clean hands.

  9. Place used paper towels into a covered waste container.
    Purpose

    Always discard contaminated waste in a covered waste container immediately to eliminate the source of infection.

  10. If needed, apply a water-based antibacterial hand lotion to prevent chapped or dry skin.
    Purpose

    Chapped skin eliminates the first line of defense against infectious organisms.

  11. Repeat the procedure as indicated throughout the day.
    Purpose

    To eliminate contaminants and prevent the transmission of pathogens to yourself and others.

Module L01-03 · Procedural skill

PPE and Instrument Sanitization

Goal: To follow Standard Precautions in removing all contaminated matter from instruments, in preparation for disinfection or sterilization, while wearing appropriate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE).

Equipment
  • Sink with cold- and hot-running water
  • Sanitizing agent or low-sudsing soap with enzymatic action
  • Decontaminated utility gloves with no signs of deterioration
  • Chin-length face shield, OR goggles and face mask if blood-borne pathogen contamination is possible
  • Impermeable gown
  • Disposable brush
  • Disposable paper towels
  • Disposable gloves
  • Disinfectant cleaner prepared per manufacturer directions
  • Covered waste container with foot pedal
  • Biohazard waste container with labeled red biohazard bag
  1. Put on impermeable gown and face shield (or goggles and mask) if potential for splashing of infectious material exists.
    Purpose

    To provide personal protection against potentially infectious matter.

  2. Put on utility gloves.
    Purpose

    To provide personal protection against potentially infectious matter and sharp instruments.

  3. Separate sharp instruments from other instruments to be sanitized.
    Purpose

    To prevent possible self-injury and exposure to infectious matter.

  4. Rinse instruments under cold running water.
    Purpose

    To help remove debris and prevent coagulation of body fluids.

  5. Open hinged instruments and scrub all grooves, crevices, and serrations with a disposable brush.
    Purpose

    Microorganisms can hide under contaminants and may not be destroyed by the disinfection process.

  6. Rinse well with hot water.
    Purpose

    Hot water removes all soap and contaminant residue.

  7. Towel-dry all instruments thoroughly and dispose of contaminated towels and disposable brush in a biohazard waste container. Do not touch the paper towel dispenser as you are obtaining towels.
    Purpose

    All contaminated material must be discarded in a labeled biohazard container and/or a labeled red biohazard bag. Touching the dispenser with the utility gloves contaminates the dispenser. Wet instruments can rust or become dull, and may also dilute disinfectant or sterilizing chemicals.

  8. Remove utility gloves and wash hands.
    Purpose

    To remove any possible contaminants.

  9. Towel-dry hands and put on disposable gloves. Decontaminate utility gloves and work surfaces using disinfectant cleaner.
    Purpose

    To prevent personal exposure to contaminants. All equipment and working surfaces should be cleaned and decontaminated with a disinfectant to prevent transmission of infectious organisms.

  10. Dispose of contaminated towels in a covered waste container.
    Purpose

    All contaminated material must be disposed of in a labeled biohazard container and/or a labeled red biohazard bag.

  11. Place sanitized instruments in a designated area for disinfection or sterilization.
    Purpose

    Sanitized instruments must be removed from the cleaning area to prevent possible cross-contamination.

  12. Remove disposable gloves. Dispose of gloves in a biohazard waste container. Sanitize hands.
    Purpose

    To prevent the spread of infectious organisms and to remove any possible contaminants.

Module L01-04 · Conceptual content

Epidemics and Pandemics

Goal: Understand the difference between epidemics and pandemics, the role of leading global health agencies, and the medical assistant's responsibilities during outbreaks.

Definition · Epidemic

An epidemic is caused by a widespread and highly contagious infection. It occurs within a community or region for an unspecified time period. Communities may anticipate seasonal outbreaks based on geographical area. An epidemic involves local and regional healthcare stakeholders such as health departments, hospitals, and clinics. Influenza (the flu) is an example — a viral respiratory infection transmitted through airborne droplets dispelled in a cough, sneeze, or speech. In the United States, flu season is most common in fall and winter months.

Definition · Pandemic

A pandemic is a global outbreak of a highly contagious disease. It may impact multiple countries or spread across continents. State, national, and world entities share the weight and responsibility of prevention, treatment, and cure.

Definition · CDC

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is the prominent public health agency in the United States. It performs scientific studies and provides evidence-based recommendations in the interest of public health.

Definition · WHO

The World Health Organization works within the United Nations system. It strives to connect nations to promote a healthier and safer world.

SARS-CoV-2 / COVID-19

A notable pandemic was caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, better known as COVID-19 or coronavirus. This highly contagious virus spreads through aerosols released from the nose and mouth when an infected person coughs, sneezes, or talks. Preventing spread can be challenging because some COVID-19 carriers are asymptomatic, or do not feel sick. Symptoms can range from a mild, common cold-like response to a severe acute respiratory disease.

Outbreaks in clinical practice

During outbreaks, clinics, hospitals, and doctor's offices see an influx of sick patients. Patients may be hospitalized, seen in office, or seen through telehealth. Patient screening includes review of symptoms and lab tests for confirmation. Reporting of disease (surveillance tracking) is submitted to local health departments and government agencies.

Medical Assistant role during outbreaks

The medical assistant assists with increased patient presence, medical history and symptomology review, performing simple lab tests, and disease reporting. Medical assistants also play a vital role in disease prevention through patient education, and some may administer vaccinations.

PPE during a viral outbreak

Infection control and use of proper personal protective equipment (PPE) are essential responsibilities of the medical assistant. Proper disinfection and aseptic technique help prevent cross-contamination and the spread of disease. Medical assistants should wear all available and required PPE — including well-fitted masks, gloves, goggles, face shields, and protective clothing. Masks, gloves, and goggles alone are NOT sufficient during a viral outbreak; face shields and protective clothing are also required.

Practice quiz · verbatim from MedCerts

Knowledge-check items

These are the actual on-screen quiz questions from the L01 Storyline modules. Click an answer to lock it in — you'll see the rationale below. Reset any time to re-attempt. One source-conflict flag noted on Q4 below.

L01-02 · Aseptic Handwashing

Q1 · L01-02
Why is it essential for a medical assistant to perform a thorough aseptic handwashing?
Rationale
"To minimize the number of pathogens on the hands, thus reducing the risk of transmission of pathogens." — L01-02 module goal, verbatim

Hand hygiene and personal cleanliness (A) are surface-level outcomes — the clinical purpose is pathogen control. Removing visible dirt (C) is a side-effect; aseptic technique targets the invisible (microbes). Time-saving (D) is unrelated to the procedure's goal.

Source: L01-02 Knowledge Check
Q2 · L01-02
Which of the following items should be removed before performing aseptic handwashing?
Rationale
"Remove all jewelry. Exception: a wristwatch, if it can be pulled up above your wrist. Jewelry can harbor microorganisms." — L01-02 step 1, verbatim

Necklaces and earrings (C) don't touch the wash zone, so they don't have to come off — the rule is about anything on the hands and wrists.

Source: L01-02 Knowledge Check
Q3 · L01-02
What is the proper technique for wetting and lathering hands during aseptic handwashing?
Rationale
"Friction removes soil and contaminants from the hands and wrists." — L01-02 step 3 PURPOSE, verbatim

Three details all need to coexist: circular motion, friction, and fingertips downward (so contaminants flow away from clean forearms). Cold water (A) doesn't hurt but isn't specified; dry-soap-then-rinse (C) skips the friction phase entirely; warm water before soap (D) reverses the order.

Source: L01-02 Knowledge Check
Q4 · L01-02 · ⚠ Source conflict flagged
What temperature water should be used during aseptic handwashing?
⚠ Source conflict — narration disagrees with answer key
"Regulate the water temperature to lukewarm. Water that is too hot can cause skin to become dry and chapped." — L01-02 step 2, verbatim

The answer key on this question marks "Hot water" as correct, but the L01-02 narration explicitly says lukewarm. Kinn's Ch 4 and CDC hand-hygiene guidelines also specify warm/lukewarm — never hot. For exam prep, treat the narration as authoritative. The MedCerts answer key on this single item appears to be wrong; we've left B selected to match what the source platform marks correct, but flag it on the real exam if you see "hot" as the only "warmth" option.

Source: L01-02 Knowledge Check

L01-04 · Epidemics and Pandemics

Q1 · L01-04
What is the difference between an epidemic and a pandemic?
Rationale
"An epidemic … occurs within a community or region. A pandemic is a global outbreak of a highly contagious disease … may impact multiple countries or spread across continents." — L01-04, verbatim

The distinction is geographic scope, not pathogen type, season, or number of patients. An epidemic still involves many people; it's just bounded to a community or region.

Source: L01-04 Knowledge Check
Q2 · L01-04
Which of the following is an example of an epidemic?
Rationale
"Influenza (the flu) is an example of an infectious disease linked to epidemics." — L01-04, verbatim

COVID-19 was a pandemic (global). Flu is a recurring seasonal epidemic, regional in any given outbreak.

Source: L01-04 Knowledge Check
Q3 · L01-04
What is the role of the CDC?
Rationale
"The CDC is the prominent public health agency in the United States. It performs scientific studies and provides evidence-based recommendations in the interest of public health." — L01-04, verbatim

D describes the WHO, not the CDC.

Source: L01-04 Knowledge Check
Q4 · L01-04
What is the role of the WHO?
Rationale
"The WHO works within the United Nations system. It strives to connect nations to promote a healthier and safer world." — L01-04, verbatim

C describes the CDC. The WHO is global / UN-aligned; the CDC is U.S.-domestic.

Source: L01-04 Knowledge Check
Q5 · L01-04
What is one example of a notable pandemic?
Rationale
"A notable pandemic was caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, better known as COVID-19 or coronavirus." — L01-04, verbatim

Influenza is the L01-04 example for an epidemic; COVID-19 is the L01-04 example for a pandemic.

Source: L01-04 Knowledge Check
Q6 · L01-04
How can the spread of COVID-19 be prevented?
Rationale
"Preventing spread can be challenging because some COVID-19 carriers are asymptomatic." — L01-04, verbatim

Because asymptomatic carriers exist, "avoiding infected individuals" (A) is unreliable — you can't know who's infected. Antibiotics (C) don't treat viruses. Diet (D) supports general health but isn't the prevention strategy. Standard precautions — hand hygiene + masks — break the transmission link of the chain of infection.

Source: L01-04 Knowledge Check
Q7 · L01-04
What is the role of the medical assistant during an epidemic or pandemic?
Rationale
"The medical assistant assists with increased patient presence, medical history and symptomology review, performing simple lab tests, and disease reporting." — L01-04, verbatim

A is the role of a researcher; D is the WHO. Patient education and (sometimes) vaccination are also MA roles per L01-04.

Source: L01-04 Knowledge Check
Q8 · L01-04
Which of the following is NOT a personal protective equipment (PPE) recommended for use during a viral outbreak?
Rationale
"Masks, gloves, and goggles alone are NOT sufficient during a viral outbreak; face shields and protective clothing are also required." — L01-04, verbatim

The trick: the question asks what's NOT recommended. Masks/gloves/goggles ARE all required — so D is correct ("none of these is excluded"). The point of the L01-04 PPE callout is that masks/gloves/goggles alone are insufficient — you also need face shields and protective clothing.

Source: L01-04 Knowledge Check