Safety and Infection Control Reviewer for NCLEX-RN 2026 (Complete Guide)
Safety and Infection Control comprises 10-16% of the NCLEX-RN. This category tests your ability to prevent harm and infection, two of the most important responsibilities in nursing. The NCLEX heavily emphasizes infection precautions, which Filipino nurses must master in their US-standardized forms.
This reviewer covers all major Safety and Infection Control topics tested on the 2026 NCLEX-RN.
Transmission-Based Precautions (Most Heavily Tested)
Master the three types of transmission-based precautions and which diseases require each.
Standard Precautions (All Patients)
Applied to ALL patients regardless of diagnosis:
- Hand hygiene before and after every patient contact
- Gloves when touching body fluids
- Gown, mask, eye protection when splashing is likely
- Safe injection practices
- Proper disposal of sharps
Assume all body fluids (except sweat) are potentially infectious.
Contact Precautions
For: MRSA, VRE, C. difficile, RSV, scabies, wound infections, multidrug-resistant organisms.
Requirements:
- Private room (or cohort with same infection)
- Gown and gloves for all contact
- Dedicated equipment
- Hand hygiene (soap and water for C. diff - alcohol does not kill spores)
Droplet Precautions
For: Influenza, pertussis, meningitis, mumps, rubella, pneumonia.
Requirements:
- Private room (or cohort)
- Surgical mask within 3-6 feet
- Patient wears mask during transport
Airborne Precautions
For: Tuberculosis, measles (rubeola), varicella (chickenpox), disseminated zoster.
Requirements:
- Negative pressure room (AIIR)
- N95 respirator (fit-tested)
- Door kept closed
- Patient wears surgical mask during transport
Memory aid for airborne: "My Chicken Has TB" (Measles, Chickenpox, Herpes zoster, TB)
Protective (Reverse) Isolation
For: severely immunocompromised patients (HSCT, neutropenia).
Requirements:
- Positive pressure room with HEPA filtration
- No fresh flowers, raw fruits/vegetables
- No sick visitors
- Strict hand hygiene
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
Donning (Putting On) Order
- Gown
- Mask/respirator
- Goggles/face shield
- Gloves
Doffing (Removing) Order
- Gloves (most contaminated)
- Goggles/face shield
- Gown
- Mask/respirator
Then perform hand hygiene immediately.
NCLEX trick: Gloves come off FIRST when doffing because they are most contaminated.
Hand Hygiene
The single most effective infection prevention practice.
WHO Five Moments:
- Before patient contact
- Before aseptic task
- After body fluid exposure risk
- After patient contact
- After contact with patient surroundings
Alcohol-based hand rub is effective for most situations EXCEPT:
- C. difficile (use soap and water - spores resist alcohol)
- Visibly soiled hands (use soap and water)
Patient Safety
Patient Identification
Always use two identifiers (name and date of birth, or name and medical record number). Never use room number alone.
Fall Prevention
Assessment tools: Morse Fall Scale, Hendrich II.
Interventions:
- Bed in low position
- Call light within reach
- Non-slip footwear
- Scheduled toileting
- Bed/chair alarms for high-risk
- Adequate lighting
- Clear pathways
Restraints
Last resort after less restrictive measures fail.
Requirements:
- Provider order (time-limited, renewed per protocol)
- Cannot be PRN (as needed) orders
- Monitor every 2 hours (circulation, skin, ROM, toileting)
- Tie to bed frame, NOT side rails
- Document need, type, monitoring, and attempts at alternatives
Restraint alternatives: sitters, family presence, frequent reorientation, addressing underlying causes (pain, hypoxia, full bladder), covering lines with clothing.
Emergency Response
Fire Safety: RACE
- Rescue patients in immediate danger
- Alarm (pull alarm, call code)
- Confine (close doors)
- Extinguish (if small and safe)
Fire Extinguisher: PASS
- Pull the pin
- Aim at the base
- Squeeze the handle
- Sweep side to side
Disaster Triage
In mass casualties, tag patients:
- Red: immediate (life-threatening but survivable)
- Yellow: delayed (serious but stable)
- Green: minor (walking wounded)
- Black: expectant (deceased or non-survivable)
Medication Safety
High-Alert Medications
Require double verification: heparin, insulin, opioids, concentrated electrolytes (potassium chloride), chemotherapy, neuromuscular blockers.
Rights of Medication Administration
Right patient, medication, dose, route, time (plus right documentation, reason, response).
Look-Alike/Sound-Alike Drugs
Use tall man lettering to differentiate (hydrOXYzine vs hydrALAZINE).
Surgical Asepsis (Sterile Technique)
Principles:
- Only sterile touches sterile
- Keep sterile field in view (turn back = contaminated)
- 1-inch border of sterile field is non-sterile
- Items below waist are non-sterile
- Do not reach over sterile field
- Hold sterile items above waist
Common Safety Question Examples
Example 1: Precaution Type
Question: A client with active tuberculosis requires which type of precautions?
A. Contact
B. Droplet
C. Airborne
D. Standard only
Answer: C - TB requires airborne precautions with negative pressure room and N95 respirator.
Example 2: C. diff Hand Hygiene
Question: After caring for a client with C. difficile, the nurse should:
A. Use alcohol-based hand rub
B. Wash hands with soap and water
C. No hand hygiene needed if gloves were worn
D. Use hand lotion only
Answer: B - C. diff spores resist alcohol. Soap and water physically removes spores.
Example 3: PPE Removal
Question: When removing PPE, which item is removed first?
A. Gown
B. Mask
C. Gloves
D. Goggles
Answer: C - Gloves are removed first because they are most contaminated.
Practice Safety and Infection Control at LisensyaPrep
LisensyaPrep's NCLEX Quiz Module 3 contains 50 practice questions on Safety and Infection Prevention and Control.
Start Module 3: Safety Practice
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- How to Pass the NCLEX on Your First Take
- Management of Care Reviewer for NCLEX-RN
- Pharmacology Reviewer for NCLEX-RN
- Physiological Adaptation Reviewer for NCLEX-RN
- Safety and Infection Control Reviewer for NCLEX-RN
- Health Promotion and Maintenance Reviewer for NCLEX-RN
- Psychosocial Integrity Reviewer for NCLEX-RN
- NCLEX Lab Values Cheat Sheet
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