Pathway step |
ACTION |
|
|
1 |
Patient identified as needing assessment for HCID
|
Place patient away from other people and continue assessment by phone.
|
|
2 |
Take full travel and presentation history by phone |
|
| 3 |
If concern re possible HCID, discuss with Infection Specialist |
|
|
4 |
Suspected HCID: Next steps
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All staff follow:
|
|
5 |
Patient stepped down or transferred to Regional Infectious Diseases Unit |
|
High consequence infectious disease (HCID) pathway
What's new / Latest updates
31/12/25: Minor modifications made to improve the readability of the guidance:
- Direct contact details for Argyll & Bute Infection and Control nurses have been removed. Generic contact details to be added.
- Advice regarding patient with suspected HCID using ward phone (to be wrapped in plastic) has been added.
- Advice added under 'History taking and 'remote assessment' on when to leave the pathway (if no concern re HCID).
- Additional face to face assessment information has been removed as extraneous information.
- Separate section on patient transportation removed as this information is elsewhere in the guidance.
- Section: 'Ongoing management of suspected HCID: Roles, responsibilities and actions' has been amended with explanatory text included for the terms used.
- Terms 'clean' and 'dirty' have been removed as these terms are obsolete.
Audience
- All NHS Highland
- Primary and Secondary Care
- Adults and Children
What is a HCID?
- High Consequence Infectious Diseases (HCIDs) are diseases that have been categorized as requiring high levels of infection control intervention to protect healthcare workers and public. They are listed here: High consequence infectious diseases (HCID) - GOV.UK
National guidance:
- High consequence infectious diseases (HCID) - GOV.UK: Contains background information, including a list of HCIDs by country.
- For infection control advice see: National Infection Prevention and Control Manual: Addendum for High Consequence Infectious Disease (HCID)
HCID clinical pathway: quick reference guide
Infection specialist contact details
Who to contact
North NHS Highland |
Argyll and Bute HSCP |
|
| Suspected HCID (adult) |
Monday to Friday 9am to 5pm
Out of hours
|
Monday to Friday 9am to 5pm
Out of hours
|
| Suspected HCID (child) |
Local paediatrician first, then Paediatric Infectious Diseases Consultant, GGC |
|
How to contact
Contact |
Contact number |
|
NHSH Infectious Diseases Consultant on call |
01463 704000 Raigmore switchboard |
|
NHSH Duty Consultant Microbiologist |
01463 704000 (Raigmore switchboard) or
01463 704206 (Lab office)
|
|
NHSH Infection control Duty Nurse, North Highland |
01463 704000 (Raigmore Switchboard) and ask to page Duty Infection Control Nurse |
|
NHSH Infection control Duty Nurse |
Generic contact details to be added
|
|
GGC Infectious Diseases Consultant on call
Queen Elizabeth University Hospital Switchboard
(any time) |
0141 201 1100 |
|
NHS Grampian Infectious Diseases Consultant |
0345 456 6000 |
|
Consultant in Public Health Medicine (CPHM) and Health Protection Team for NHS Highland |
Working hours: 01463 704886. Out of hours: 01463 704000 (Raigmore switchboard) |
|
Scottish Ambulance Service |
0345 602 3999 |
|
Imported fever service |
0844 778 8990 (Infection Specialist only) |
|
Paediatric Infectious Diseases Consultant, GGC |
0141 201 1100 |
Patient placement while awaiting assessment
Where the patient presents |
Patient placement |
| Community |
|
| Primary Care |
|
| Secondary Care ED / Outpatient setting |
|
| Inpatient setting |
|
| Notes |
|
History and remote assessment
Take full travel and presentation history remotely. The following checklist may be helpful. Face to face assessment is NOT recommended at this stage.
- Travel history (including dates, countries and regions),
- Any history of fever or feeling feverish, date of onset
- History of symptoms, dates of onset
- Activities, living conditions and animal contact during travel
- Contact with unwell people (including dates of last contact, countries and region where contact occurred)
- How unwell patient is in terms of systemic symptoms and trajectory
- Whether patient has respiratory symptoms
- Information relevant to differential diagnoses
- Immunosuppressed?
Once you have taken the history, if you have any concerns call infection specialist (see contacts). If no concern regarding HCID then leave this pathway and follow standard clinical care pathways.
NHS Highland triage algorithm or national resources High consequence infectious diseases (HCID) can be used to assess risk for HCID.
NHS Highland have developed a HCID triage tool that departments can use to help staff identify patients who are at risk of HCID.
- You can consider using this tool if your patient is relatively well and stable. See HCID risk assessment triage algorithm.
- If your patient is unwell or unstable go straight to discussion with infection specialist.
Deteriorating patient at home or in the community
Unwell patient at home or in community setting pending full assessment
If 999 call warranted:
If the clinician judges that the patient is clinically deteriorating and warrants a 999 call:
- Proceed to call 999
- Inform ambulance control of patient travel history and whether 'suspected HCID'.
- Scottish Ambulance will call on any appropriate resources they have available to attend to a patient deteriorating at home.
- Ensure to complete history and assessment prioritising informing infection specialist of incident / development.
- Infection specialist then urgently informs CPHM who arrange a PAG.
If 999 call NOT warranted:
- Urgently complete history and remote assessment, prioritising informing infection specialist of patient.
- Infection specialist then urgently informs CPHM who arrange a PAG.
PAG discussion for a patient deteriorating at home or in community will include SAS. The usual preferred pathway is for SAS attendance to patient. If SAS are unable to attend in the required timeframe, the PAG may recommend that the patient’s exposed family members transport the patient to nearest RGH or Raigmore.
All RGHs and Raigmore should have a HCID plan in place with a designated single room suitable for stabilisation of an unwell patient pending SORT ambulance retrieval.
Receiving clinician MUST be told of HCID status of patient so they can arrange safe receipt of patient into the healthcare facility.
Infection specialist assessment
Infection specialist to decide whether case should be managed as a suspected HCID
- This may require further telephone assessment of the case, and discussion with Imported Fever Service.
- If NOT to be managed as suspected HCID: then revert to standard pathways.
- Rediscuss with infection specialist over subsequent days if ongoing concern.
Patient designated as 'suspected HCID': next steps
This is a HIGH IMPACT situation and is likely to have knock-on effects for healthcare delivery in the location.
- Roles and responsibilities, including communication cascades are stated in section: Ongoing management of suspected HCID: Roles, responsibilities and actions.
- All healthcare professionals involved MUST fulfil the responsibilities listed.
- Action Cards for the each lead healthcare professional are to be used to check all responsibilities completed.
1. Isolate patient and instigate infection control procedures
Responsible person: Lead Nurse for location- If patient is at home they should self-isolate in a room by themselves.
- If patient is in a multi-patient location in a healthcare facility (eg ward or triage bay) they should be moved to a suitable single room following the site HCID plan.
Each hospital in NHS Highland MUST have a HCID plan that includes the rooms suitable for temporary housing of a patient with suspected HCID. Decision to move the patient is taken by Consultant microbiologist in discussion with Duty Infection control nurse and hospital manager. Organising and delivering the move is led by the location duty manager.
- Staff giving care to the patient should wear HCID assessment PPE as described in National Infection Control Manual addendum on HCID National Infection Prevention and Control Manual: Addendum for High Consequence Infectious Disease (HCID). Staff contact with patient should be minimum required to deliver essential care
2. Refer to Regional Infectious Diseases Unit
Responsible person: NHS Highland infection specialist
In hours: ID Consultant; Out of hours: Consultant Microbiologist
- For adults the NHSH infection specialist who has assessed the patient as suspected HCID refers the patient.
- Patients in Argyll and Bute are referred to GGC Regional Infectious Diseases Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital.
- Patients from all other sites in NHS Highland are referred to Grampian Regional Infectious Diseases Unit. Aberdeen Royal Infirmary.
- For children, the NHS Highland Paediatrician will discuss with Glasgow Infectious Diseases Paediatrician.
- See section: Contact details
3. Arrange transfer
Responsible person: Primary Care: GP; Secondary Care: Site Manager
- Logistics for transfer will be arranged by a PAG (Problem Assessment Group), convened by Consultant in Public Health Medicine (CPHM), and including receiving Infectious Diseases Consultant and SAS.
4. Continue to care for patient pending transfer
Responsible person: Lead Clinician for location
- Clinical management is the responsibility of the clinicians attending the patient with advice from infection specialist and other specialists as required.
- If the patient is at home the GP remains responsible until the patient is retrieved by ambulance or received into secondary care.
- Patient care should be given by the most experienced staff to prevent the need for re-assessment. This minimises the number of staff exposed.
- Adherence to infection control guidance is critical.
See section: Infection prevention and control - Patient specimens, including blood samples, should NOT be taken without authorisation of Consultant Microbiologist. If samples are indicated, see section: Laboratory samples
5. Protect the public
Responsible person: Consultant in Public Health Medicine (CPHM)
-
- CPHM will lead any actions required.
Action cards
Action Card 1: Suspected HCID ongoing management: Attending Healthcare Professional
Action Card 2: Suspected HCID ongoing management: Lead Nurse for Location
Action Card 3: Suspected HCID ongoing management: Infectious Diseases Consultant
Action Card 4: Suspected HCID ongoing management: NHSH Consultant Microbiologist
Action Card 5: Suspected HCID ongoing management: Domestic services
Action card 6: Suspected HCID ongoing management: NHSH location Duty Manager
Action card 7: Suspected HCID ongoing management: Laboratory Senior BMS
Infection prevention and control: Additional information
Patients designated 'suspected HCID' represent a high infection control risk.
- Advice is available from the duty infection control nurse for your area (9am to 5pm) in collaboration with the duty consultant microbiologist (on call 24/7), see: Contact details.
- National guidance is here National Infection Prevention and Control Manual: Addendum for High Consequence Infectious Disease (HCID)
PPE
- A store of HCID assessment PPE should be available in each NHSH hospital. Location of the PPE should be specified in the site HCID plan. Follow your site plan regarding getting additional sets of PPE.
- Staff should not care for a patient with suspected HCID unless they have been trained and deemed competent in the donning and doffing of the PPE. High Consequence Infectious Diseases (HCID) | Turas | Learn (nhs.scot)
Patient placement
- All NHSH hospitals should have a HCID plan which assigns a space for temporary isolation of patients with suspected HCID pending transfer, including designated ‘donning’ and ‘doffing’ areas for putting on and removing PPE. The plan should include whether any adjacent clinical spaces need to be closed.
- The isolation room should be a single room, ideally negative pressure but neutral pressure is ok if negative pressure not available. Positive pressure rooms should NOT be used. Room should have ensuite facilities or at least a dedicated commode, as well as significant areas of surrounding space. It is vital that there are clearly segregated areas for 'donning' and 'doffing' PPE, as described in National Infection Prevention and Control Manual: Addendum for High Consequence Infectious Disease (HCID).
Waste
- Waste from possible HCID patients should be stored in the patient’s room until instructions given by Infection Control Doctor regarding disposal.
Linen
- Contaminated clothing or linen are potential sources of transmission.
- Do NOT shake clothing or linen
- Linen must NOT be returned to laundry until authorised by Infection Control Nurse or Duty Microbiologist. It should be stored securely in the location of the patient.
Exposed locations
- Any location exposed to a patient categorised as ‘suspected HCID’ should be closed immediately to new transfers / admissions / discharges until risk assessment by infection control doctor or nurse has been performed, and any cleaning required completed.
Infection prevention and control in community setting
- There are no national guidelines specifically for community setting. Bespoke guidance will be given by the infection control doctor and Consultant in Public Health on a case by case basis.
Laboratory samples
Samples can be taken in NHSH on a case by case basis as directed by Microbiology or Infectious Diseases consultant. This may be to assess urgently for a likely differential diagnosis (such as malaria), or to do some diagnostics that may allow stepdown of the case from HCID pathway.
Authorisation
Each patient sample MUST be authorised by Duty Consultant Microbiologist BEFORE they are taken. The Duty Consultant Microbiologist then informs the receiving laboratories of the samples.
Samples that may be authorised
- For reference laboratory testing for the HCID: sample type and test depends on the HCID in question
- For other tests: only if clinically indicated
- EDTA and serum blood tubes (for local FBC, U&E, etc) ONLY if clinically indicated
- EDTA (FBC tube) sample for malaria testing
- Blood cultures
- Viral throat swab (for testing for respiratory pathogens by PCR)
- Urine in plain universal for legionella and pneumococcal antigen test
Transport within NHS Highland sites
For transport of samples from patient to a laboratory on the same site as the patient, samples are transported by hand in ‘HCID sample containers’. (These are the same as the containers used for viral haemorrhagic fever).
- These containers should be available at each A&E department.
- Their location should be specified in the site HCID plan.
- If not, these are available from Microbiology during office hours, and Raigmore A&E out of hours.
- One container is required for each laboratory, eg. Blood Sciences and Microbiology.
- Each box contains a hard plastic container with lid, bubble wrap, and absorbent material.
- Consultant Microbiologist will inform the Laboratories that specimens are expected.
Onward Transport
For onward transport from the Laboratory, or transport from one NHS Highland site to another, specimens MUST be packaged in Category B transport containers.
Collecting Samples
- Collecting blood requires:
- A doctor who takes the blood
- An assistant who waits at the door of the room
- A trolley stationed outside the room in the clean zone should be available to use as a 'work station' for the assistant
- Assemble equipment to take into room:
- disposable tourniquet
- dedicated sharps bin
- clinical waste bag
- prelabelled specimen tubes
- extra alcohol wipes to wipe gloved hands and tubes
- Assemble materials for assistant:
- Separate specimen bag for each sample, with each bag containing absorbent tissue
- Specimen request forms must be removed from the specimen bag at the perforation, and left in clean zone away from patient room.
- Assemble materials for packaging:
- Separate hard container for each lab (i.e. one for Blood Sciences, and one for Microbiology)
- Cushioning material, such as bubble wrap or paper towels
- Label the container with the destination lab to avoid mix-ups
- Put on PPE as per section: Infection prevention and control.
- Assistant PPE is gloves, apron, eye protection and surgical mask
- Doctor to take samples from patient as usual with room door shut.
- Remember, the viral swabs need to be removed from the transport medium and discarded into the clinical waste PRIOR to replacing the tube cap.
- Ensure cap is screwed down tightly.
- After filling the tubes, the doctor should wipe his/her hands with an alcohol soaked wipe, then wipe each specimen tube individually.
- Approach door and signal for assistant outside to open door but not enter room.
- Assistant to hold open separate specimen bag containing absorbent tissue for each tube.
- The doctor from the patient’s room should drop a single blood bottle into each bag using a 'no touch technique'.
- The bags are placed on the trolley.
- Assistant and doctor remove PPE in normal way.
- Away from patient room in clean area:
- Wearing clean gloves, assistant to close each bag, wrap the bag in cushioning material (such as bubble wrap or paper towel, and put into separate hard container for each lab.
- Put on clean gloves
- Close lid of hard container.
- If there is an outer cardboard box: put hard container in box with request form.
- If there is no outer box: carry the hard container and the request form separately. Don't put the request form into the hard container.
- Samples and request forms
- To be delivered by hand to laboratories. Do NOT use pneumatic tube.
Ongoing management of suspected HCID: Roles, responsibilities and actions
| Role and Responsibility |
Actions |
|
Attending healthcare professional
|
A high security (SORT) ambulance is required: Inform SAS that patient is suspected HCID, there may be significant delay in retrieval |
|
Lead Nurse for location
|
|
|
Infectious Diseases Consultant
Within working hours (Mon to Fri, 9 to 5) this will be the NHS Highland Duty Infectious Diseases Consultant. Outside these hours this will be the RIDU (Regional ID Unit) Infectious Diseases Consultant |
|
|
NHSH Duty Microbiologist
|
|
|
Consultant in Public Health Medicine (CPHM)
|
|
| NHSH location duty manager |
A high security (SORT) ambulance is required: Inform SAS that patient is suspected HCID, there may be significant delay in retrieval |
Additional resource: HCID risk assessment triage algorithm
Assess HCID risk:
- Follow the NHS Highland HCID triage algorithm below
- Or national resources High consequence infectious diseases (HCID) - GOV.UK.
- If you have concerns call the Infection Specialist (see contacts).
- If NO concerns regarding HCID, then leave this pathway and follow standard clinical care pathways.
NHS Highland HCID triage algorithm
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Abbreviations
- CPHM: Consultant in Public Health Medicine
- ED: Emergency Department
- EDTA: Ethylenediaminetetraacetic Acid
- FBC: Full Blood Count
- FFP3: Filtering Facepiece Respirator (Class 3)
- GGC: Greater Glasgow and Clyde
- HCID: High Consequence Infectious Disease
- HSCP: Health and Social Care Partnership
- ID: Infectious Diseases
- IPC: Infection Prevention and Control
- PAG: Problem Assessment Group
- PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction
- PPE: Personal Protective Equipment
- RIDU: Regional Infectious Diseases Unit
- RGH: Rural General Hospital
- SAS: Scottish Ambulance Service
- SORT: Specialist Operations Response Teams
- U&E: Urea and Electrolytes
Editorial Information
Last reviewed: 01/10/2025
Next review date: 31/10/2028
Author(s): Infectious Diseases Department.
Version: 1.1
Approved By: TAM subgroup of the ADTC
Reviewer name(s): A Cochrane: Consultant in Infectious Diseases and Microbiology.
Document Id: TAM736