The correct answer is C, "Ambulance personnel should be evaluated for possible exposure," as this statement is true regarding the need for evaluating exposure to communicable illness. According to the Certification Board of Infection Control and Epidemiology (CBIC) guidelines, the presence of Gram negative diplococci in a cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) specimen is suggestive of a serious bacterial infection, most likely Neisseria meningitidis, which causes meningococcal disease. This condition is highly contagious and can be transmitted through respiratory droplets or direct contact with respiratory secretions, particularly during procedures like intubation (CBIC Practice Analysis, 2022, Domain I: Identification of Infectious Disease Processes, Competency 1.1 - Identify infectious disease processes). The patient was intubated during ambulance transport, creating a potential aerosol-generating procedure (AGP) that could have exposed ambulance personnel to infectious droplets before Droplet Precautions were instituted upon arrival at the Emergency Department (ED). Therefore, evaluating ambulance personnel for possible exposure is necessary to assess their risk and determine if post-exposure prophylaxis (e.g., antibiotics) or monitoring is required.
Option A (follow-up evaluation is not required for this laboratory finding) is incorrect because the identification of Gram negative diplococci in CSF is a critical finding that warrants investigation due to the potential for meningococcal disease, a reportable and transmissible condition. Option B (ED personnel should be evaluated for possible exposure) is less applicable since the patient was immediately placed in Droplet Precautions upon ED admission, minimizing exposure risk to ED staff after that point, though it could be considered if exposure occurred before precautions were fully implemented. Option D (follow-up evaluation is not necessary as the appropriate precautions were promptly instituted) is inaccurate because the prompt institution of Droplet Precautions in the ED does not retroactively address the exposure risk during ambulance transport, where precautions were not in place.
The focus on evaluating ambulance personnel aligns with CBIC’s emphasis on identifying and mitigating transmission risks associated with communicable diseases, particularly in high-risk settings like ambulance transport (CBIC Practice Analysis, 2022, Domain III: Infection Prevention and Control, Competency 3.2 - Implement measures to prevent transmission of infectious agents). This step is supported by CDC guidelines, which recommend exposure evaluation and prophylaxis for close contacts of meningococcal disease cases (CDC Meningococcal Disease Management, 2021).
[References: CBIC Practice Analysis, 2022, Domain I: Identification of Infectious Disease Processes, Competency 1.1 - Identify infectious disease processes; Domain III: Infection Prevention and Control, Competency 3.2 - Implement measures to prevent transmission of infectious agents. CDC Meningococcal Disease Management, 2021., , , ]