Description
Certification Name: Certificate in Infection Control and Prevention Manager
Course Id: CICPM/Q0001.
Eligibility: Graduation or Equivalent.
Objective: The objective of this course is to equip healthcare professionals with comprehensive knowledge and practical skills to develop, implement, and manage effective infection control and prevention programs in healthcare and community settings. The course aims to enhance participantsβ understanding of microbiology, transmission of infectious agents, standard and transmission-based precautions, outbreak investigation, sterilization and disinfection protocols, risk assessment, and regulatory compliance.Β
Duration: Three Month.
Β How to Enroll and Get Certified in Your Chosen Course:
Β Step 1:Β Choose the course you wish to get certified in.
Β Step 2:Β Click on theΒ βEnroll NowβΒ button.
Β Step 3:Β Proceed with the enrollment process.
Β Step 4:Β Enter your billing details and continue to course fee payment.
Β Step 5:Β You will be redirected to the payment gateway. Pay the course and exam fee using one of the following methods:
Debit/Credit Card, Wallet, Paytm, Net Banking, UPI, or Google Pay.
Β Step 6:Β After successful payment, you will receive your study material login ID and password via email withinΒ 48 hoursΒ of fee payment.
Β Step 7:Β Once you complete the course, take theΒ online examination.
Β Step 8:Β Upon passing the examination, you will receive:
β’ AΒ soft copyΒ (scanned) of your certificate via email within 7 days of examination.
β’ AΒ hard copyΒ (original with official seal and signature) sent to your address within 45 day of declaration of result.
Β Step 9:Β After certification, you will be offeredΒ job opportunitiesΒ aligned with your area of interest.
Online Examination Detail:
Duration- 60 minutes.
No. of Questions- 30. (Multiple Choice Questions).
Maximum Marks- 100, Passing Marks- 40%.
There is no negative marking in this module.
| Marking System: | ||||||
| S.No. | No. of Questions | Marks Each Question | Total Marks | |||
| 1 | 10 | 5 | 50 | |||
| 2 | 5 | 4 | 20 | |||
| 3 | 5 | 3 | 15 | |||
| 4 | 5 | 2 | 10 | |||
| 5 | 5 | 1 | 5 | |||
| 30 | 100 | |||||
| How Students will be Graded: | ||||||
| S.No. | Marks | Grade | ||||
| 1 | 91-100 | O (Outstanding) | ||||
| 2 | 81-90 | A+ (Excellent) | ||||
| 3 | 71-80 | A (Very Good) | ||||
| 4 | 61-70 | B (Good) | ||||
| 5 | 51-60 | C (Average) | ||||
| 6 | 40-50 | P (Pass) | ||||
| 7 | 0-40 | F (Fail) | ||||
Β Key Benefits of Certification-Β Earning a professional certification not only validates your skills but also enhances your employability. Here are the major benefits you gain:
Β Practical, Job-Ready Skills βΒ Our certifications are designed to equip you with real-world, hands-on skills that match current industry demands β helping you become employment-ready from day one.
Β Lifetime Validity βΒ Your certification is valid for a lifetime β no renewals or expirations. It serves as a permanent proof of your skills and training.
Β Lifetime Certificate Verification βΒ Employers and institutions can verify your certification anytime through a secure and reliable verification system β adding credibility to your qualifications.
Β Industry-Aligned Certification βAll certifications are developed in consultation with industry experts to ensure that what you learn is current, relevant, and aligned with market needs.
Β Preferred by Employers βΒ Candidates from ISO-certified institutes are often prioritized by recruiters due to their exposure to standardized, high-quality training.
Β Free Job Assistance Based on Your Career Interests βΒ Receive personalized job assistance and career guidance in your preferred domain, helping you land the right role faster.
Assessment Modules:
Module 1: Fundamentals of Infection Control: Basics of microbiology and infectious agents, Chain of infection and modes of transmission, Principles of infection prevention and control (IPC), Standard precautions and hand hygiene protocols, Role of the Infection Control Manager, Overview of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs).
Module 2: Infection Surveillance and Risk Assessment: Types and methods of infection surveillance, Identifying high-risk areas and vulnerable populations, Conducting infection risk assessments, Data collection, analysis, and interpretation, Use of infection control indicators and benchmarks, Reporting and documentation procedures.
Module 3: Disinfection, Sterilization, and Waste Management: Cleaning, disinfection, and sterilization techniques, Spaulding classification of medical devices, Selection and use of disinfectants and sterilizers, Biomedical waste segregation and disposal guidelines, Environmental cleaning and surface decontamination, Monitoring and validating cleaning processes.
Module 4: Outbreak Management and Emergency Response: Outbreak detection, investigation, and response planning, Contact tracing and containment strategies, Isolation and quarantine protocols, Coordination with public health authorities, Communication strategies during outbreaks, Case studies of healthcare outbreak scenarios.
Module 5: Infection Control Guidelines and Compliance: International and national IPC guidelines (CDC, WHO, NABH), Legal and ethical aspects of infection control, Antimicrobial stewardship and resistance prevention, Policy development and implementation, Internal audits and compliance checks, Documentation for accreditation and inspections.
Module 6: Training, Leadership, and Program Management: Designing and delivering IPC training programs, Staff education and behavioral change strategies, Leading multidisciplinary IPC teams, Developing infection control plans and reports, Evaluating program effectiveness and KPIs, Career development and certification preparation.
Certificate in Infection Control and Prevention Manager
π Career Opportunities After Certificate in Infection Control and Prevention Manager
A Certificate in Infection Control and Prevention Manager prepares professionals to prevent and control healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) in hospitals, clinics, laboratories, and healthcare facilities. The course focuses on infection surveillance, sterilization protocols, biomedical waste management, outbreak investigation, antimicrobial stewardship, risk assessment, and regulatory compliance.
Infection Control Managers play a vital role in maintaining patient safety and improving hospital quality standards.
πΉ Career Opportunities in India
1οΈβ£ Infection Control Manager
Key Responsibilities:
Develop infection control policies; monitor HAI rates; supervise sterilization and disinfection procedures; conduct staff training; ensure compliance with hospital protocols.
Salary in India:
βΉ6 β βΉ12 LPA (Mid-Level)
βΉ15 β βΉ25 LPA (Experienced / Large Hospitals)
2οΈβ£ Infection Control Officer
Key Responsibilities:
Conduct infection audits; track outbreak cases; coordinate with microbiology labs; maintain surveillance reports aligned with guidelines from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.
Salary in India:
βΉ5 β βΉ10 LPA
3οΈβ£ Hospital Quality & Safety Coordinator
Key Responsibilities:
Support NABH accreditation; implement infection prevention programs; conduct risk assessments; maintain documentation following standards encouraged by the World Health Organization.
Salary in India:
βΉ6 β βΉ15 LPA
4οΈβ£ Public Health Infection Surveillance Officer
Key Responsibilities:
Monitor community-level infection trends; conduct awareness programs; coordinate outbreak response activities; prepare epidemiological reports.
Salary in India:
βΉ5 β βΉ14 LPA
5οΈβ£ Biomedical Waste & Sterilization Supervisor
Key Responsibilities:
Supervise sterilization departments; ensure proper waste segregation; maintain autoclave and disinfection logs; conduct compliance checks.
Salary in India:
βΉ4 β βΉ10 LPA
π Career Growth Path
Infection Control Nurse/Officer β Infection Control Manager β Quality & Safety Head β Hospital Administrator β Director β Clinical Governance
With additional qualifications (MBA in Hospital Administration, Public Health, Epidemiology), professionals can earn βΉ15 β βΉ40 LPA within 6β10 years.
π’ Industries Hiring
Multi-Specialty Hospitals
Government Hospitals
Medical Colleges
Diagnostic Laboratories
Public Health Departments
Healthcare Consultancy Firms
Pharmaceutical Companies









