Hospital infection preventionists perform both administrative and clinical duties. They work directly with healthcare workers and their patients, but also collect and analyze data to improve the infection prevention program. The purpose of outsourced IP work is to remove the responsibility of data collection and analysis from the in-house IPs, thus either enabling a hospital to comply with reporting requirements even if they are understaffed, or freeing in-house infection preventionists to focus more on implementing interventions and programs.
So, what are some possible responsibilities of a remote infection preventionist?
So how does this the field of outsourced infection prevention actually work? While the field is relatively new, it seems that most remote infection preventionists work in one of two ways. First, they can be directly hired by the healthcare facility (or, more likely, a system) to be a part of their remote data analysis team. A second, and increasingly popular way, is through an external service that provides remote infection prevention support to an array of facilities or networks. One such service that has been operating for over twenty years is the Duke Infection Control Outreach Network (DICON), which was established to provide low-resource hospitals with high-quality data surveillance and analysis. Other service providers have cropped up over the years, many forming within the last few years to meet the growing need for this kind of work. There seems to be a profitable market for these services.
What does the future hold for remote infection prevention? Trends seem to indicate significant growth, but only if there are enough certified infection preventionists to fill the need. Overall, there is a scarcity of infection preventionists nationwide, without the prospect of improvement (many IPs are approaching retirement age, and not enough individuals are in the IP pipeline to replace them). While artificial intelligence and machine learning may make the process of data collection and analysis more streamlined, the human touch will still be required. In fact, the projected growth for the field of epidemiology (which includes infection preventionists) is 27%, which is significantly higher than the average national growth of 10%. However, time will tell whether outsourcing some IP responsibilities has net benefits for patients and the hospital bottom line.