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A Risk Assessment of Handling Clostridium Difficile Contaminated Garments in Health Care Laundry Operations

File(s)
Date
2025-12-16Author
Flomo, Malvina
Publisher
University of Wisconsin--Stout
Department
Risk Control and Safety Management
Advisor(s)
Finder, Brian
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study assessed the risks associated with handling C. diff–contaminated garments within
Company XYZ’s Laundry Department. The absence of a structured system for identifying,
segregating, and decontaminating C. diff–contaminated textiles, combined with inconsistent PPE
availability, inadequate staff training, and reliance on non-sporicidal disinfectants, places
employees at heightened risk for dermal and inhalation exposure and creates substantial
regulatory vulnerabilities for the facility. To evaluate these risks, structured observations of
laundry processes, facility assessments, employee interviews/surveys, and policy reviews were
conducted. The findings indicate low compliance with basic infection-control practices such as
glove use, hand hygiene, and appropriate surface decontamination, as well as the absence of C.
diff–specific labeling or segregation procedures. PPE supplies were inconsistently available
across shifts, and 70% of employees reported receiving no pathogen-specific training. When
compared to OSHA, CDC, and WHO infection-control expectations, major deficiencies were
identified in PPE accessibility, exposure-control communication, disinfectant selection, and
supervisory enforcement. Risk-reduction recommendations include implementing a formal
identification and segregation process for contaminated garments, establishing reliable PPE
supply management, delivering pathogen-specific training with competency verification,
incorporating EPA-registered sporicidal agents into disinfection procedures, improving
communication and labeling systems between departments, and conducting routine compliance
audits to ensure sustained adherence to regulatory standards.
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/97567Type
Thesis
Description
Plan B
