Professional Documents
Culture Documents
**Device-related infection
- Blood Stream Infection 3 2 2 3 1 2 1 29%
- Ventilator Associated Infection 0%
- Urinary Tract Infection 0%
- Implant from Surgical Procedure 0%
- Drain or Tube - Temporary 0%
- Ostomy or Related Opening 0%
- Peritoneal Dialysis 0%
- Shunt 0%
- Other 0%
Resistant Microbes
- MRSA 0%
- VRE 0%
- ESBL 0%
- Clostridium difficile 0%
- other 0%
Surgical Site Infection
- Superficial 0%
- Deep 0%
- Organ space 0%
Extrinsic Infection
- Patient-to-Patient Transmission 0%
**- Worker-to-Patient Transmission 0%
- Visitor-to-Patient Transmission 0%
- Foodborne / Waterborne 0%
- Vectorborne / Vermin 0%
- Airborne Environmental Source 0%
- Waterborne / Aerosol Source 0%
**- Surface / Immediate Environment 0%
**- Contaminated Instrument/Equip 0%
This document is copyrighted material, Washington State Rural Healthcare Quality Network. May be used with permission from RHQN and acknowledgment of copyright.
Adaptation used with permission from Joan Wideman. Author - Sandy Kangas, PhD, RN.
SEVERITY (MAGNITUDE vs MITIGATION)
PROBABILITY HUMAN PROPERTY BUSINESS PREPARED- INTERNAL EXTERNAL RISK
IMPACT IMPACT IMPACT NESS RESPONSE RESPONSE
Time, Community &
Likelihood this will Possibility of Physical Losses Interruption of Preplanning & Relative
Effectiveness, Mutual Aid staff
ISSUE occur: Death or Injury: and Damages: services: Prevention: Threat * :
Resources: and supplies:
This document is copyrighted material, Washington State Rural Healthcare Quality Network. May be used with permission from RHQN and acknowledgment of copyright.
Adaptation used with permission from Joan Wideman. Author - Sandy Kangas, PhD, RN.
Many cells of the Risk Assessment Worksheet have been protected (locked) to prevent changes.
This has been done for the following reasons:
(1) Prevent accidental changes/erasure of formulas and labels when entering data.
(2) User convenience, via automatic skipping of non-data entry cells that saves time.
However, some facilities/users may wish to modify, insert or delete infection risk items (rows) in the worksheet.
To accomplish this, the worksheet must be un-protected (un-locked) so that editing can take place.
The process of unlocking the worksheet is different between Microsoft Excel 2010, 2007, & 2003.
However, the password for unlocking is the same; it is:
RiskControl (note: case sensitive)
Please note:
(1) When adding new row(s) of infection risk control items, be sure to copy the formulas from the cells
directly above the new row into the new row(s) cells.
(2) When adding or removing row(s), check that the formula in the "Total Average Risk" cell,
located in the very bottom right corner, has changed to reflect the new row spans.
Excel should do this automatically, but some errors prevent this; if this error occurs, modify the
formula to reflect the correct row span for Sum and CountIf.
(3) If you wish to lock-protect the formula and label cells of any new row(s) you add, you must select each cell,
locate the "Format" menu item (often available when right-clicking on the cell), choosing "Protection",
and checking the "Lock" item on. The cells will not actually lock until performing the procedure
above where you enter a password, at which time all cells in the worksheet marked as "Lock" will
be Protected.
(4) Excel worksheets (within the same workbook) are Protected separately. Unlocking/unprotecting one sheet
does not automatically unlock others. Both worksheets in this workbook file contain locked cells.
the worksheet.
again by returning
otect Sheet".
again by returning
otect Sheet".