PODCAST · health
Infection Control Exchange
by Wayne Tucker
Infection Control Exchange is a podcast dedicated to advancing infection prevention and healthcare quality improvement. Hosted by Wayne Tucker, BA, MSc (Psych), MSc (IPAC), EMBA, CIC, LTC-CIP, each episode explores real-world infection-control practices, outbreak preparedness, and lessons from healthcare and long-term-care environments. Join the conversation and strengthen your infection prevention impact.
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Outbreak Management in Healthcare
Outbreak Management in HealthcareOutbreaks don’t fail because we don’t know what to do — they can fail when systems can’t keep up in real time.In this episode of the Infection Control Exchange, we explore how outbreaks actually unfold across healthcare settings and why traditional approaches to tracking and managing cases often break down under pressure.Drawing on experience across public health, acute care, and long-term care, this episode focuses on the operational realities of outbreak response — and what’s needed to improve visibility, coordination, and speed when it matters most.How outbreaks escalate across units and teamsThe limitations of manual tracking systemsWhy real-time visibility is criticalWhat better outbreak management can look likeHealthConnex supports healthcare teams with:Outbreak trackingAudit and compliance toolsImmunization data managementIn this episode: Sponsored by HealthConnex
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The Critical Role of Stakeholders in IPAC Programs
Infection prevention and control is often viewed as the responsibility of IPAC teams—but in reality, successful IPAC programs depend on alignment among key internal and external stakeholders across the entire healthcare system.In this episode of The Infection Control Exchange Podcast, we explore the critical role of both internal and external stakeholders in shaping IPAC outcomes.From frontline staff and physicians to leadership, environmental services, facilities teams, and public health partners—each group plays a vital role in reducing risk and supporting safe care environments.We also examine common breakdowns in stakeholder engagement and how healthcare leaders can strengthen relationships, improve communication, and build shared accountability across the system.This episode is designed for healthcare leaders, infection prevention professionals, and anyone involved in delivering safe, high-quality care.
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Outbreak Line Listing: Why the Details Matter in IPAC
Outbreak Line Listing: Why the Details Matter in Infection Prevention and ControlIn this episode of The Infection Control Exchange Podcast, we take a deep dive into one of the most important—and often underappreciated—tools in outbreak management: the line list.Using an outbreak scenario, this episode walks through the structure of a line list and explains how each data element contributes to effective outbreak control.Topics covered include:• Case identification and unit tracking• Symptom documentation and baseline considerations• The importance of symptom onset timelines• Intervention tracking, including vaccination and antiviral• Identifying complications and severity indicators• Interpreting laboratory test results• Common mistakes that impact outbreak responseLine lists are more than documentation—they are the foundation for surveillance, decision-making, and communication during outbreaks.This episode is particularly relevant for IPAC professionals, acute care teams, long-term care teams, and public health practitioners.
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Why Healthcare Workers Should Never Work While Sick
Why Healthcare Workers Should Never Work While SickIn this episode of The Infection Control Exchange Podcast, Wayne Tucker explores an important but often overlooked infection prevention risk in healthcare settings: staff working while sick.While healthcare workers are deeply committed to their patients/residents and colleagues, reporting to work with symptoms can unintentionally increase the risk of respiratory viruses and other infectious diseases transmission within healthcare settings, and could lead to an outbreak.In this 15-minute episode, Wayne discusses:Why presenteeism remains common in healthcare organizationsThe infection prevention risks associated with symptomatic staffHow workplace culture and staffing pressures can influence decision-makingThe critical role of leadership in reinforcing safe practicesWhy protecting patients, residents, and colleagues must always be the priorityThis episode highlights how everyday decisions made by healthcare workers play a key role in preventing the spread of infections within healthcare settings.
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Why Infection Prevention Requires Strong Leadership
In this Infection Control Exchange – Quick Insight episode, Wayne Tucker discusses the critical role leadership plays in the success of infection prevention and control programs.While IPAC is often associated with technical practices such as PPE, hand hygiene, and environmental cleaning, the effectiveness of these measures is strongly influenced by organizational leadership.In this episode, Wayne explores:Why infection prevention should be viewed as a systems issue rather than simply a policy issueHow leadership behaviour influences staff behaviour and compliance with infection prevention practicesThe importance of ensuring adequate resources and organizational support for infection prevention programsHow strong leadership contributes to building a culture of patient safetyEffective infection prevention programs depend not only on guidelines and protocols, but also on leadership that actively supports and prioritizes patient safety.
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When Infection Control Becomes Theatre
When Infection Control Becomes TheatreInfection prevention and control measures are designed to reduce risk and protect patients, residents, and healthcare workers. But during times of crisis—particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic—some practices emerged that raised an important question:Were they truly reducing infection risk, or were they primarily providing reassurance?In this episode of the Infection Control Exchange Podcast, Wayne Tucker explores the concept of “IPAC theatre.” These are highly visible practices that appear protective but may not always deliver meaningful infection control benefits.Topics discussed in this episode include:• The concept of infection control theatre• Why visible actions can sometimes replace evidence-based interventions• Temperature screening for staff and visitors during the pandemic• The difference between risk reduction and perceived safety• How public expectations, leadership decisions, and politics can influence infection control measures• The importance of continually evaluating whether interventions are effective, proportional, and evidence-informedInfection prevention and control are about reducing risk, not performing safety measures. This episode explores how IPAC professionals can maintain scientific integrity while navigating public expectations and organizational pressures.
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Meet the Host: 24 Years of Healthcare Leadership & IPAC Experience
In this episode of The Infection Control Exchange Podcast, Wayne Tucker steps behind the mic to share the story behind the platform.This episode explores:• The professional journey that led to the creation of the podcast• 24+ years of healthcare leadership experience across public health, long-term care, acute care, and primary care• Advanced education, including an MSc in Infection Control and an Executive MBA• Dual infection prevention certifications (CIC and LTC-CIP)• Experience leading outbreaks, construction IPAC initiatives, and system improvement projects• Why infection prevention gaps continue to exist in healthcare• The vision for The Infection Control Exchange podcast and the broader EcosystemThis episode is for healthcare leaders, infection prevention professionals, consultants, and organizations seeking innovative, system-level thinking in infection control and patient safety.The Infection Control Exchange Podcast is committed to strengthening infection prevention practice through leadership, innovation, and collaboration.
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Infection Control Saves Lives: The Mindset Shift That Changes Every Shift
Infection Control Saves Lives isn’t just a statement—it’s a practical truth that plays out every day in healthcare.In this episode of The Infection Control Exchange, Wayne Tucker explores a mindset shift that can change practice under pressure: moving from seeing IPAC as “compliance” to seeing it as life-saving care.You’ll hear how everyday actions—hand hygiene, correct PPE use, environmental cleaning, and source control—interrupt transmission pathways and prevent infections that can lead to serious complications, hospitalizations, and death—especially in vulnerable patients and residents.This episode also highlights the role of leadership in safety culture: when leaders model IPAC practices and remove barriers (time, supplies, workflow), safer behavior becomes possible and sustainable.Key topics:The “life-saving lens” for every shiftHow small lapses become large outcomesPractical, high-impact behaviors that reduce transmissionLeadership accountability and systems that support IPAC
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IPAC and Leadership: The Infection Control Exchange
IPAC and Leadership | The Infection Control Exchange (Season 2)In this episode, I am addressing a gap that increases infection prevention and control (IPAC) risk in every healthcare setting: leadership not consistently following the same IPAC practices expected of frontline staff.I have repeatedly seen situations where leaders reported to work while symptomatic — a decision that increases risk to patients/residents, staff, and overall organizational resilience. This episode is not about blame — it’s about accountability, culture, and closing preventable gaps that contribute to infectious disease transmission.In this episode, I cover:Why leadership behavior sets the real “standard” for IPAC cultureThe risk impact of coming to work symptomatic (and the message it sends)Psychological safety and why staff stop speaking up when leaders don’t model complianceHow inconsistent adherence becomes a system-level risk (not a “people problem”)Practical ways leaders can strengthen IPAC culture immediatelyWhat “IPAC leadership” should look like during routine operations and outbreak pressureIf we want safer care environments for vulnerable residents/patients, IPAC can’t be optional for anyone — especially leadership.Host: Wayne Tucker, MSc (Infection Control), CIC, LTC-CIPPodcast: The Infection Control Exchange
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Environmental Disinfection: An Undervalued Pillar of Infection Prevention | In Conversation with Bunzl Canada
Environmental disinfection plays a far greater role in infection prevention than it’s often given credit for.In this episode of The Infection Control Exchange Podcast, I’m joined by Bunzl Canada to discuss how environmental disinfectants contribute to outbreak prevention, daily risk reduction, and safer healthcare environments.We explore why environmental disinfection is frequently undervalued, how structured frameworks like Bunzl’s Confident Clean model help drive consistency and accountability, and why documentation, education, and leadership support are essential for sustainable infection prevention practices.This episode is a reminder that effective infection prevention extends well beyond hand hygiene — and that environmental cleaning is a cornerstone of patient/resident and staff safety.🎙️ The Infection Control Exchange Podcast🎧 New episodes available across all major podcast platforms
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IPAC & Construction – Part 4: Post-Occupancy Risks
In Part 4 of this construction and infection prevention series, we focus on what happens after construction is complete and spaces become operational — a phase where infection risk often resurfaces quietly and unexpectedly.This episode explores:• Post-occupancy infection risks and blind spots• HVAC and water system recommissioning• Residual dust and environmental cleaning/disinfecting• Orientation training of all staff and additional training post occupancy• Infectious diseases and outbreak risks following construction handover• Accountability challenges once projects are “complete”And post-occupancy is one of the most critical periods for prevention.This episode is essential listening for IPAC professionals, healthcare leaders, facilities teams, and anyone involved in healthcare construction and redevelopment.🎙️ The Infection Control Exchange Podcast
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Construction & Infection Prevention – Part 3: Where Risk Actually Lives
Construction & Infection Prevention – Part 3: Where Risk Actually LivesIn Part 3 of the Construction & IPAC series, we move beyond policy and into practice.This episode explores where infection risks actually emerge during healthcare construction projects — including:Anteroom failures and barrier breakdownsDust control, airflow, and pressure issuesWater system disruptions and opportunistic pathogensHuman factors that quietly undermine controlsWhy “temporary” construction risks often persist long after work is completeIf you’re an infection preventionist or ICP, facilities leader, project manager, or healthcare executive, this episode will help you recognize risks earlier, and intervene more effectively.🎙️ Hosted by Wayne Tucker📍 The Infection Control Exchange Podcast
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Design Decisions That Quietly Build Infection Risk
In Part 2 of this three-part Construction Series, we focus exclusively on design-stage decisions in healthcare construction and renovation.This episode examines how infection risk is often quietly embedded during planning — through assumptions about workflow, room size, hand hygiene placement, storage, materials, and airflow design intent.This is not an episode about construction execution or outbreaks.It’s about what happens before the first wall is built.Part 3 will move into active construction, barriers, dust control, PPE storage, HVAC disruption, commissioning, and early occupancy.
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Construction Series – Part 1: Why Infection Prevention and Control Must Start at Design
Construction Series – Part 1: Why Infection Prevention and Control Must Start at DesignHealthcare construction and renovation projects create infection risks long before patients ever enter the space. Too often, infection prevention and control staff are brought in late — after key decisions have already been made — and it is very difficult to make any changes.In Part 1 of this 3-part series, this episode focuses on the foundational concepts behind infection prevention and healthcare construction, including:Why early IPAC involvement mattersHow design decisions influence infection riskThe consequences of treating infection prevention and control as an afterthoughtThis episode sets the stage for Part 2 (Design & Planning) and Part 3 (Construction, Commissioning & Occupancy).🎙️ The Infection Control Exchange PodcastHosted by Wayne Tucker
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CIC Exam Preparation: How to Think, Study, and Succeed
CIC Exam Preparation: How to Think, Study, and SucceedPreparing for the CIC exam can feel overwhelming — especially when balancing clinical work, audits, outbreaks, and leadership responsibilities.In this episode of The Infection Control Exchange Podcast, we break down:• How the CIC exam is structured• What candidates often misunderstand• How to align real-world IPAC practice with exam expectations• The importance of practicing exam questions to get an idea of priority content, and get comfortable with challenging multiple choice questions. • Time is a significant factor in doing the CIC or LTC-CIP exam. Important to complete the exam to increase your chance of success.• Practical study strategies that work. This episode is ideal for:✔ CIC candidates✔ Early-career infection preventionists✔ IPAC professionals considering certification🎙️ Hosted by Wayne Tucker, CIC, LTC-CIP
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AI in Infection Prevention: Beyond Automation to Smarter Risk Detection
Artificial intelligence is rapidly entering healthcare—but what does it actually mean for infection prevention and control?In Season 2, Episode 1 of The Infection Control Exchange Podcast, we explore how AI can support infection prevention teams by identifying patterns, correlations, and emerging risks that traditional surveillance methods may miss.This episode moves beyond hype and automation to focus on practical, responsible applications of AI, including:Detecting hospital-associated infection patterns across multiple sitesIdentifying correlations that would be difficult for humans to see at scaleUnderstanding the difference between correlation and causationWhy AI should support—not replace—clinical judgmentThe critical role of governance, oversight, and infection prevention leadershipThis episode sets the foundation for Season 2, which focuses on AI, design, construction, and the future of infection prevention and control.
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Episode 12 (Part 3): COVID-19 Lessons Learned – What Must Change
Episode 12 (Part 3): COVID-19 Lessons Learned – What Must ChangeIn Part 3 of this COVID-19 Lessons Learned series, Wayne Tucker explores the deeper, long-term implications of the pandemic and what healthcare systems must change to be better prepared moving forward.This episode discusses:• System-wide gaps revealed during COVID-19 across Canada• Infection prevention capacity and readiness• Workforce burnout, leadership, and accountability• New healthcare construction and the critical role that infection control plays right from the start at the design stage• Lessons that still apply across long-term care and acute care• Why meaningful change cannot be delayedThis conversation is intended for infection preventionists, infection control leads and managers, healthcare leaders, frontline staff, policymakers, and quality professionals committed to improving patient and resident safety.🎙️ Infection Control Exchange Podcast📍 Canada | Global perspectives
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Episode 13 - Staying Out of Outbreak Over the Holidays
The holiday season brings increased risk for outbreaks across healthcare settings — especially in long-term care and acute care environments that never close.In this special Christmas episode of the Infection Control Exchange Podcast, we focus on practical, frontline-informed strategies to help healthcare teams reduce outbreak risk during the holidays. From staffing challenges and increased visitors to environmental cleaning, hand hygiene, and early symptom recognition, this episode highlights what truly matters when systems are under pressure.Whether you work in infection prevention, environmental services, nursing, leadership, or frontline care, this episode is a timely reminder that infection prevention and control don’t take a holiday.🎧 Topics include:• Holiday-related outbreak risks• Practical prevention strategies• Long-term care and acute care considerations• The role of frontline teams during peak pressure periods
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Episode 11 - COVID-19 Lessons Learned (Part 2 of 3) : LTC on the Front Lines
Episode 11 - COVID-19 Lessons Learned (Part 2 of 3) : LTC on the Front LinesPart 2 of the COVID-19 Lessons Learned series explores the real-world operational challenges faced by infection prevention and control teams during the pandemic.This episode focuses on how system design, workforce decisions, and shared responsibility affected outbreak management — particularly in long-term care. Topics include the importance of embedding infection control into new construction, the responsibilities that come with working in environments serving vulnerable populations, and the critical role of both staff and families in preventing transmission.Key discussion areas include:Staffing issues: burnout, lack of staff capacity during surges, for example, outbreaks, pandemics, etcDownside of having additional external oversight and internal organizational processes: less time for the IPAC manager to be on the floor due to the tasks that need to be completed for an outbreak or multiple outbreaks.Infection prevention considerations in healthcare facility designWorkforce responsibility in caring for vulnerable populationsThe importance of not attending work when symptomaticThe role families play in protecting residents by delaying visits when they are unwellThis episode builds on Part 1 and sets the stage for Part 3, which will examine long-term change, resilience, and future preparedness.COVID-19, Infection Prevention, IPAC, Pandemic Preparedness, Long-Term Care, Outbreak Management, Patient Safety, Healthcare Leadership, Public Health, Healthcare Systems,Lessons Learned
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Episode 10 - COVID-19 Lessons Learned (Part 1 of 3): System Preparedness — What the Pandemic Exposed
COVID-19 Lessons Learned (Part 1 of 3): System Preparedness — What the Pandemic ExposedIn this episode, we begin a three-part exploration into what COVID-19 taught us about pandemic preparedness across long-term care, acute care, and the wider healthcare system. This series focuses on practical insights grounded in real experiences — not headlines — highlighting what frontline IPAC teams actually faced throughout the pandemic. In Part 1, we discuss:- Uneven preparedness across provinces and territories - PPE shortages and supply chain fragility- Human factors: communication, staffing, and training - Outbreak challenges in long-term care - Importance of Pandemic and LTC planning- Improvements since 2020- Key gaps that still need attention before the next public-health emergencyThis episode sets the foundation for Parts 2 and 3, which will explore specific themes in greater depth.Follow the Infection Control Exchange Podcast for upcoming episodes in the COVID-19 Lessons Learned Series.
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Bonus Episode – Colour-Changing Hand Sanitizer Concept
Bonus Episode – Colour-Changing Hand Sanitizer ConceptIn this episode, host Wayne Tucker (MSc, EMBA, CIC, LTC-CIP) walks through the early development of a new colour-changing hand sanitizer designed to make hand hygiene more visible, teachable, and reliable in real-world settings.Instead of focusing on dispensers or hardware, this product concept centers on what happens after the sanitizer is applied. The formulation temporarily changes colour on the hands, helping the user see which areas were well covered — and which were missed. This has potential applications in staff education, resident and patient engagement, audits, and real-time feedback on hand hygiene technique.Wayne discusses:• The problem of “invisible” hand hygiene and risks associated with missed areas (current frontline practice)• How a colour-changing sanitizer could support training and daily frontline practice• Potential use in any healthcare setting, including long-term care and acute care. • Product development has global implications that could significantly transform the hand sanitizer industry. • Early considerations for formulation, safety, and usability• Next steps in moving this concept toward testing and development are support through partnerships and collaborations. Need to create a prototype that can be tested in the field at a limited number of healthcare settings. This short episode provides a focused look at one hand hygiene innovation and the thinking behind turning a simple idea into a practical infection-prevention tool that can significantly reduce the transmission of infectious diseases by showing staff the areas they miss when applying hand sanitizer.Hand HygieneInfection PreventionInfection ControlIPACHealthcare innovationProduct developmentInfection Control ExchangeHand Sanitizer
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Episode 9 — The Importance of a Point of Care Risk Assessment (PCRA)
Episode 9 — The Importance of a Point of Care Risk Assessment (PCRA)A Point of Care Risk Assessment, or PCRA, is any interaction with a resident or patient in which healthcare workers make rapid decisions throughout their shift to reduce their risk of exposure:• What is the risk of exposure?• What PPE is required?• Is this the right environment for this task?• What precautions are needed based on what I see, hear, and know?In this episode, I walk through the purpose of a PCRA, why it’s distinct from Routine Practices and Additional Precautions, and how frontline staff use PCRA as a real-time safety tool to protect residents, patients, and themselves.We’ll cover:✔ What a PCRA is and why it matters✔ How frontline staff use PCRA thinking before every interaction✔ The difference between PCRA and Routine Practices✔ Practical examples from acute care, LTC, and community✔ How PCRAs support safe workflows and reduce preventable exposuresThis is a foundational concept in IPAC — and when done consistently, it strengthens safety culture, reduces transmission risk, and improves decision-making at every point of care.
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Modular PPE System Prototype – Call for Partners
Healthcare teams need PPE systems that adapt to real-world needs—not rigid designs that never fit the environment. After 23 years in infection control and healthcare leadership, I’ve seen the same challenges repeated across LTC, acute care, and community settings.To solve this, I’m building a modular, configurable PPE storage system—a “LEGO-style” approach that allows gloves, masks, gowns, wipes, face shields, and other components to be rearranged, removed, added, or replaced in seconds.The next step is developing a full CAD-engineered, 3D-printed prototype.To make this possible, I’m seeking:1️⃣ Engineering or Capstone Teams– Schools of engineering, design, CAD, product development– Looking for a meaningful, real-world innovation project2️⃣ Sponsors & Industry Partners- GOJO, Diversey/Solenis, Virox, Medline, Clorox Healthcare, Sani Marc, Cardinal Health, 3M, Ecolab, and others– Funding or material support for prototype development3️⃣ Healthcare Pilot Sites- Extendicare, Shannex, Revera, Northwood, Bayshore, Nova Scotia Health, Horizon, Acute Care & LTC partners– For real-world testing and workflow validationIf your organization is interested in collaborating, sponsoring, or piloting this modular PPE system, I’d be happy to connect.📩 Contact:Wayne Tucker, MSc, EMBA, CIC, LTC-CIPFounder – Infection Control Exchange [email protected]’s build infection-control tools that actually work for healthcare teams.
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Episode 8 – Who I Am & How I Support Healthcare Organizations
Episode 8 – Who I Am & How I Support Healthcare OrganizationsIn this special episode of The Infection Control Exchange, I take a step back from the technical topics and share more about my background, my journey in infection prevention, and the hands-on support I provide across long-term care, acute care, and community settings.In this episode, I discuss:• My education, credentials, and professional experience• How I approach IPAC challenges in real-world environments• Guiding teams through inspections, audits, and compliance work• Lessons learned from outbreaks and complex cases• Supporting frontline teams, leaders, and quality programs• Why I design practical tools, workflows, and educational products• The purpose and vision behind The Infection Control Exchange EcosystemIf you’re considering IPAC consulting, leadership support, outbreak assistance, or practical problem-solving for your organization, this episode is the best introduction to how I can help.🎙 Hosted by: Wayne Tucker (MSc, EMBA, CIC, LTC-CIP)
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Episode 7 - Inspections and Compliance: A Practical Guide for IPAC Leaders
Episode 7 - Inspections and Compliance: A Practical Guide for IPAC LeadersIn this episode of The Infection Control Exchange, host Wayne Tucker breaks down the realities of inspection and compliance in long-term care, drawing from years of firsthand experience with Ministry of Health inspections.Inspections often create anxiety — but they don’t have to. With the right approach, inspections can become opportunities to strengthen your infection prevention program, improve communication, and demonstrate system control.This episode explores:• Why inspectors enter long-term care homes and what they evaluate• How to set a professional, positive tone the moment they arrive• The importance of timely and organized documentation• Proactive rounding during inspections — and why it matters• Communicating effectively and avoiding defensiveness• Developing corrective action plans inspectors can trust• Turning inspection findings into a long-term quality improvement strategy. Whether you’re an IPAC professional, healthcare leader, or LTC administrator, this episode offers practical guidance to help you navigate inspections with clarity, confidence, and leadership.A successful inspection occurs when the team works together to build an IPAC culture. When you have achieved that culture, you are ready for anything, including an LTC inspection. You are doing what you do y🎧 The Infection Control Exchange — advancing infection prevention culture, leadership, and practical education.
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Episode 6 - A Day in the Life of an ICP or Infection Preventionist
🎙️ Episode 6 — A Day in the Life of an Infection PreventionistWhat does a typical day look like for an Infection Prevention and Control (IPAC) professional? In this two-part episode, Wayne Tucker walks through a realistic day in the life of an Infection Preventionist/IPAC Professional working in long-term care — from proactive surveillance and communication to managing an emerging outbreak.Part 1:A regular Monday begins with reviewing PCR swabs and weekend lab results, following up with Public Health as needed, and checking on symptomatic residents. Wayne shares how daily routines like supply checks, PPE readiness, and staff rounding help maintain a strong infection control culture and relationships across all departments.Part 2:An ordinary day quickly shifts when new symptomatic cases arise and an outbreak is declared. Wayne covers the immediate response — outbreak signage, team huddles, Public Health coordination, submitting line lists, enhanced disinfecting for high touch areas, and real-time communication updates with staff, families, and medical teams.This episode captures the fast-paced, multidisciplinary nature of infection prevention — where every action, connection, and decision helps protect residents, staff and visitors.🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon Music.🦠 The Infection Control Exchange – advancing IPAC culture, leadership, and learning.
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Episode 5 – “Hand Hygiene: The Foundation That Still Needs Fixing”
Even though hand hygiene remains one of the most effective infection control measures against the spread of infectious disease, compliance in healthcare settings continues to fall short worldwide. Why is something so simple still so difficult to sustain?In this episode, Wayne Tucker explores the complex human, cultural, and system-level factors behind missed hand hygiene opportunities. From busy clinical environments and glove overreliance to gaps in leadership visibility and feedback culture, each segment examines why compliance remains a challenge not only in Nova Scotia and Canada, but across the globe.Wayne also discusses how rapid workflow, poor technique, and short application times often lead to missed areas of the hands. He highlights evidence-based strategies to strengthen daily practice: real-time feedback, peer modelling, improved accessibility, and supportive leadership that normalizeshand hygiene as an expected professional reflex rather than a monitored task.The episode closes with a key message: improving hand hygiene isn’t a campaign — it’s a cultural movement. When healthcare organizations combine strong systems, positive reinforcement, and human-centered design, hand hygiene performance becomes part of the DNA of safe care.Hosted by Wayne Tucker, The Infection Control Exchange.
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Episode 4 - Building an Infection Prevention and Control Culture
In this episode of The Infection Control Exchange, host Wayne Tucker explores what it truly means to build an Infection Prevention and Control (IPAC) culture that goes beyond policies and procedures.From leadership visibility to staff engagement, Wayne discusses how strong IPAC cultures are reflected in daily practice, not just written standards and policies. He shares real-world insights from long-term care and healthcare leadership—illustrating how small, consistent actions shape safer environments for residents, patients, and staff.Topics include:- Defining what “IPAC culture” really means in practice- The role of leadership visibility, recognition, and modelling behaviour- Overcoming common barriers like compliance fatigue and communication gaps- Sustaining engagement and collaboration for IPAC beyond outbreak periods to be part of daily routines to protect vulnerable residents and patients. Whether you’re an IPAC professional, quality leader, or healthcare manager, this episode will inspire reflection on how to strengthen infection prevention culture across your team or organization.Listen now and join the IPAC conversation.
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Episode 3 - What Is Working and Not Working in Infection Control
In this episode of Infection Control Exchange, Wayne Tucker explores what’s working — and what still needs improvement — in infection prevention and control across healthcare environments. Drawing from experience and data, he discusses real-world challenges, system gaps, and examples of successful practices that are making a measurable difference in patient and staff safety.🎧 Host: Wayne Tucker, MSc, EMBA, LTC-CIP, CIC💡 Theme: Leadership, infection control, quality, and lessons learned from the field
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Episode 2 - National Infection Control Week (Bridging Gaps, Building Bridges)
National Infection Control Week (NICW)To celebrate NICW (Oct 20–24, 2025), I share simple ways teams can engage—daily micro-activities, friendly contests, and quick wins that keep hand hygiene and donning/doffing PPE awareness top-of-mind while protecting residents, patients, and colleagues. It is an opportunity this week to draw attention to the critical role of infection control in reducing the transmission of infectious diseases within facilities like hospitals, long-term care homes, etc. We all play a daily role in infection control, which protects vulnerable residents and patients. Keywords: infection control, infection prevention, IPAC, patient safety, outbreak management, hand hygiene, healthcare leadership, Halifax, public health
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Episode 1 - Introduction and Vaccines
Welcome to the debut episode of The Infection Control Exchange, a podcast dedicated to advancing infection prevention, control, and healthcare quality improvement.In this first episode, host Wayne Tucker, BA, MSc (Psych), EMBA, MSc (IPAC), CIC, LTC-CIP shares his journey through infection prevention and control — from his early experiences to his leadership roles across acute care, public health, primary care and long-term care environments. Wayne reflects on lessons learned, professional milestones, and the evolving standards that continue to shape infection prevention practice across Canada and beyond.The discussion also highlights the ongoing importance of vaccines — both COVID-19 and influenza — in healthcare and community protection. Wayne explores vaccine uptake, challenges in public perception, and how infection control professionals can support evidence-based dialogue with staff, residents, patients, and families.Listeners will also get a preview of upcoming episodes covering:Outbreak preparedness and the essential role of front-line teams during respiratory virus season.Measuring outbreak control and transmission indicators as markers of success.Wayne’s master’s dissertation findings on infection control auditing — including hand hygiene and PPE compliance during outbreak versus non-outbreak periods (2023–2024).Common deficiencies identified through auditing, and how organizations can translate findings into better education, training, and prevention practices.Whether you’re an infection control professional, healthcare leader, or someone passionate about quality and safety, The Infection Control Exchange aims to connect practice with purpose. Expect authentic conversations, evidence-informed discussions, and practical insights that strengthen the collective work of infection prevention professionals.🎧 Host: Wayne Tucker, BA, MSc (Psych), EMBA, MSc (IPAC), CIC, LTC-CIP🎙️ Episode: 1 – Introduction and Vaccines📍 Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada💡 The Infection Control Exchange — Conversations that advance infection prevention, leadership, and healthcare quality.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Infection Control Exchange is a podcast dedicated to advancing infection prevention and healthcare quality improvement. Hosted by Wayne Tucker, BA, MSc (Psych), MSc (IPAC), EMBA, CIC, LTC-CIP, each episode explores real-world infection-control practices, outbreak preparedness, and lessons from healthcare and long-term-care environments. Join the conversation and strengthen your infection prevention impact.
HOSTED BY
Wayne Tucker
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