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Apex Nursing

Reference — Infection Control

Common Isolation Guidelines

Look up what isolation precautions apply to a specific condition. Organized by pathogen and disease — not by precaution type. For PPE selection principles and standard precautions, see Isolation Precautions. For a side-by-side comparison of how contact, droplet, and airborne precautions differ, see Isolation Precautions Reference.

Educational use only. Precaution assignments follow CDC Guideline for Isolation Precautions (2007, updated 2017). Institutional protocols may expand on these minimums. Always confirm current guidance with your facility's infection control department. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Precaution Color Key

Airborne — N95 + AIIR Droplet — Surgical mask Contact — Gown + Gloves

Condition-Based Precaution Lookup

Condition / PathogenPrecaution
Tuberculosis (TB) — active pulmonary/laryngealAirborne
Measles (rubeola)Airborne
Varicella (chickenpox)Airborne + Contact
Disseminated herpes zoster (shingles)Airborne + Contact
Influenza (seasonal flu)Droplet
Pertussis (whooping cough)Droplet
Meningococcal disease (Neisseria meningitidis)Droplet
MumpsDroplet
Rubella (German measles)Droplet
COVID-19Droplet + Contact
MRSA (methicillin-resistant S. aureus)Contact
VRE (vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus)Contact
C. difficile (Clostridioides difficile)Contact
RSV (respiratory syncytial virus)Contact (+ Droplet per some protocols)
ScabiesContact
Norovirus / gastroenteritisContact
Wound infections (draining, MDRO)Contact

Clinical Notes by Condition

Tuberculosis (TB) — active pulmonary/laryngeal

Airborne

Door closed at all times. Patient stays in AIIR until 3 consecutive negative AFB sputum smears confirmed.

Measles (rubeola)

Airborne

Only immune staff should enter. Highly contagious — second most infectious disease known.

Varicella (chickenpox)

Airborne + Contact

Dual precautions required. Only immune staff should enter. Immune status verification essential.

Disseminated herpes zoster (shingles)

Airborne + Contact

Localized zoster in immunocompetent patients requires contact only. Disseminated or immunocompromised: airborne + contact.

Influenza (seasonal flu)

Droplet

N95 required if performing aerosol-generating procedures. Patient wears mask during transport.

Pertussis (whooping cough)

Droplet

Droplet precautions until 5 days after the start of effective antibiotic therapy.

Meningococcal disease (Neisseria meningitidis)

Droplet

Precautions until 24 hours after initiation of effective antibiotic therapy.

Mumps

Droplet

Droplet precautions for 5 days after onset of parotid swelling.

Rubella (German measles)

Droplet

Droplet precautions for 7 days after rash onset. Pregnant staff should avoid exposure.

COVID-19

Droplet + Contact

Follow current institutional guidance — protocols vary. N95 required for aerosol-generating procedures.

MRSA (methicillin-resistant S. aureus)

Contact

Dedicate equipment to room. Soap and water for hand hygiene if visible soiling; ABHR otherwise.

VRE (vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus)

Contact

Dedicate equipment. Bleach-based disinfectant for environmental cleaning.

C. difficile (Clostridioides difficile)

Contact

SOAP AND WATER ONLY for hand hygiene — ABHR does not kill C. diff spores. Terminal cleaning with sodium hypochlorite (bleach) required.

RSV (respiratory syncytial virus)

Contact (+ Droplet per some protocols)

Particularly important in pediatric and immunocompromised patients. Check institutional policy for droplet addition.

Scabies

Contact

Precautions maintained until treatment completed. Crusted (Norwegian) scabies requires strict contact precautions and is highly contagious.

Norovirus / gastroenteritis

Contact

Soap and water preferred for hand hygiene — ABHR has limited efficacy against norovirus. Bleach-based cleaning of environment.

Wound infections (draining, MDRO)

Contact

Applies when wound cannot be contained by dressing. Dedicate wound care supplies to the patient.

NCLEX Quick Tips

  • Airborne — N95 + negative pressure room + door closed: TB, measles, varicella — memorize all three
  • Droplet — surgical mask: influenza, pertussis, meningococcal — door may stay open
  • Contact — gloves + gown: MRSA, VRE, C. diff, scabies — dedicate equipment to room
  • C. diff = soap and water: ABHR does NOT kill C. diff spores — this is a classic NCLEX distinction
  • Varicella = airborne + contact: dual precautions; only immune staff should enter
  • Patient transport: airborne and droplet patients wear a surgical mask (not N95) during transport
  • Standard precautions: always applied to every patient — transmission-based precautions are added on top, not instead of

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Nurses Association (ANA) Standards of Practice · The Joint Commission. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →