Share On Social!
The pandemic revealed long-standing gaps in infection control knowledge and understanding among the frontline healthcare workforce.
This is why CDC launched Project Firstline, a training and education collaborative designed to ensure all healthcare workers, no matter their role or educational background, have the infection control knowledge and understanding they need and deserve to protect themselves, their patients, and their coworkers.
Salud America! at UT Health San Antonio, in partnership with the National Hispanic Medical Association (NHMA) and CDC Project Firstline, brings you a three-part episode podcast series, “Behind the Mask,” to explore infection control through three specific and diverse healthcare lenses: patient navigators/health screeners/community health workers/promotoras; nurses; and rural healthcare workers.
In this second special Episode 41 of the Salud Talks Podcast, two frontline healthcare workers discuss the role of nurses in infection control.
- WHAT: A special #SaludTalks Podcast discussion about the role of nurses in infection control.
- WHERE: Available on Spotify and SoundCloud.
- WHEN: The episode went live at 1:30 p.m. on September 26, 2022.
- WHO: Callie Rainosek and Alyssa Gonzalez, Salud America! Salud Talks Podcast Producers; Dr. Amelie Ramirez, director of Salud America! and its home base, the Institute for Health Promotion Research at UT Health San Antonio; Dr. Anna Maria Valdez, PhD, RN, CEN, CFRN, CNE, FAEN, FAADN; and Gloria E. Barrera, MSN, RN, PEL-CSN.
In this episode, we explore questions such as:
- What role do nurses play in infection control?
- What challenges do nurses face related to infection control?
- How can nurses overcome challenges, and use CDC’s Project Firstline resources to promote infection control?
Be sure to use the hashtag #SaludTalks to join the conversation on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram — share more information, stories, and advice about thinking and learning!
Don’t forget to check out the Salud Talks podcast, and, of course, subscribe on all platforms!
By The Numbers
142
Percent
Expected rise in Latino cancer cases in coming years
[…] The pandemic is another chapter in the bitter story of American racism and inequality. Black and Latinx people are being infected and are dying at much higher rates than white Americans. Many people of […]
[…] coronavirus has killed over 61,000 Latinos in America according to the CDC, accounting for over 18.2% of the total COVID deaths in the […]
[…] Whereas Hispanics make up 11% of D.C.’s inhabitants, they signify 19% of the COVID cases, and 14% of the deaths. Equally, 46% of D.C.’s residents are Black, they usually make up an alarming 75% […]
[…] and historical mistreatment. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Latino and Black American communities are three times more likely to become infected with […]
[…] Covid pandemic has hit the Latino community particularly hard, and data from the nonprofit health equity advocacy group Salud America! shows Latinos lead in the 0-24 age […]
[…] the pandemic, Latinos took major blows, both in terms of COVID-19 cases and also from the economic recession under former President Donald Trump. Nearly half (49%) of […]
[…] the positive trend, the harm may have already been done. The pandemic has disproportionately impacted Latino communities. Reuters reported that election-related or political disinformation that […]
[…] pesar de la tendencia positiva, es posible que el daño ya esté hecho. La pandemia ha impactado desproporcionadamente Comunidades latinas. Reuters informó que la desinformación política o relacionada con las […]
[…] residentes blancos muestran una tasa mucho más baja con 10 muertes por cada 100,000 habitantes(8 9) . Los afroestadounidenses por su parte, denuncian subsistemas de salud que les segregan […]
[…] https://salud-america.org/coronavirus-case-rates-and-death-rates-for-latinos-in-the-united-states/ […]
[…] https://salud-america.org/coronavirus-case-rates-and-death-rates-for-latinos-in-the-united-states/ […]
[…] communities have the second-highest number of COVID-19 cases in the U.S. They’re also more likely to become hospitalized and die from the disease than other […]
[…] total, around 160,000 Latinos were killed by COVID-19. This accounts for 16% of the 1 million deaths in the country. The […]