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1. Ralph Lee
Occupational Hygienist
Infection Control Branch
Centre for Health Protection
5 February 2005 Preventing Sharps Injury
2. Itinerary Legislations
Occupational Exposures and Risks
Risk Control Strategies
Engineering Control
Sharps Injury Log
Overview of Sharps Injury Surveillance in US
Current Status of DH and her needs
3. Legislations Local Legislations:
Occupational Safety and Health Ordinance (Cap. 509)
Employee Compensation Ordinance
(Cap. 282)
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA):
29 CFR 1910.1030, Occupational Exposure to Bloodborne Pathogens
4. Occupational Safety and Health Ordinance (Cap. 509) to ensure the safety and health of employees when they are at work;
to prescribe measures that will contribute to making the workplaces of employees safer and healthier for them;
to improve the safety and health standards applicable to certain hazardous processes, plant and substances used or kept in workplaces;
generally to improve the safety and health aspects of working environments of employees.
5. General Duties of Employers ensure the safety and health at work
provide or maintain plant and systems of work that are safe and without risks to health;
make arrangements for ensuring safety and absence of risks to health in connection with the use, handling, storage or transport of plant or substances;
provide information, instruction, training and supervision
maintain the workplace in a condition that is safe and without risks to health;
provide or maintain means of access to and egress from the workplace that are safe and without any such risks;
provide or maintain a working environment for the employer's employees that is safe and without risks to health.
6. General Duties of Employees take care for the safety and health of persons (including the employee) who are at the employee's workplace and who may be affected by the employee's acts or omissions at work;
as regards any requirement imposed in the interests of safety or health on the employee's employer or any other person by this or any other Ordinance, must, so far as reasonably practicable, co-operate with the employer or other person so far as may be necessary to enable the requirement to be complied with.
7. Notifiable Occupational Diseases Under section 15 of OSHO (Cap. 509)
If, on examining an employee or a former employee or the body of a person who was immediately before the death an employee or former employee, a medical practitioner-
finds or suspects that the employee or former employee is or was suffering from an occupational disease specified in Schedule 2; and
believes that the disease was or may have been attributable to an occupation specified in column 3 of that Schedule,
the practitioner must notify the finding or suspicion to the Commissioner.
8. Employee Compensation Ordinance (Cap. 282) Sch. 2 – Occupational Diseases
B7 Parenterally contracted viral hepatitis
Any occupation involving contact with-(a) human blood or human blood products; or(b) a source of viral hepatitis.
9. OSHA’s Bloodborne Pathogens Standard
10. Bloodborne Pathogens Standard 29 CFR 1910.1030, Occupational Exposure to Bloodborne Pathogens
Published December 1991
Effective March 1992
Scope
ALL occupational exposure to blood and other potentially infectious material (OPIM)
OPIM:
Semen, vaginal secretion, CSF, synovial fluid, pleural fluid, pericardial fluid, peritoneal fluid, amniotic fluid, and any body fluid visibly contaminated with blood.
Unfixed tissue / organ
HIV containing cell or tissue cultures and organ culture
uOPIM:
Semen, vaginal secretion, CSF, synovial fluid, pleural fluid, pericardial fluid, peritoneal fluid, amniotic fluid, and any body fluid visibly contaminated with blood.
Unfixed tissue / organ
HIV containing cell or tissue cultures and organ culture
u
11. Bloodborne Pathogens Standard Major Provisions by Paragraph
(b) Definitions
(c) Exposure Control Plan (ECP)
(d) Engineering and Work Practice Controls
- Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
(e) HIV and HBV Research Labs
(f) Vaccination, Post-Exposure Follow-up
(g) Labeling and Training
(h) Recordkeeping Labeling and training: biohazard label on container and waste.
Record keeping includes medical record, training record, availability, transfer of records. And sharp injury log.Labeling and training: biohazard label on container and waste.
Record keeping includes medical record, training record, availability, transfer of records. And sharp injury log.
12. Occupational Exposure and Risks
13. Blood and Body Fluid Exposure Percutaneous injury (e.g., needlesticks or cut with sharps, human bites)
Contact of mucous membrane or non intact skin with blood or body fluid.
14. Risks of Needlestick & Sharps Injuries Source status Risks of infection
HBsAg+ HBeAg + 30%
HCV+ 3-10%
HIV+ 0.3%
15. Risk of occupational HIV Transmission Route
Percutaneous
Mucous membrane
Cutaneous
16. Common causes of percutaneous injuries Disposal-related causes
Collision with health care worker or sharp
Clean up
Handling/passing device during or after use
17. Other Potentially Infectious Material (OPIM) Body fluids visibly contaminated with blood:
Semen, vaginal secretions
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
Synovial fluid
Pleural and pericardial fluid
Peritoneal fluid
Pericardial fluid
Amniotic fluid
Unfixed tissue/organ
HIV containing cell or tissue cultures or organ cultures
18. Methods of Compliance (OSHA BBP Standard) Universal Precautions
Engineering and Work Practice Controls
Personal protective equipment
Housekeeping
19. Risk Control Strategies Engineering control
Administrative control
Record Keeping and Surveillance
Work practice control
Employee vaccination programme
Treatment immediately after the accident
Post-exposure prophylaxis
20. Engineering Control
21. Additional Definitions1910.1030(b) Engineering Controls - includes additional definitions and examples:
Sharps with Engineered Sharps Injury Protections
Needleless Systems
22. Engineering ControlsNew Definition “… means controls (e.g., sharps disposal containers, self-sheathing needles, safer medical devices, such as sharps with engineered sharps injury protections and needleless systems) that isolate or remove the bloodborne pathogens hazard from the workplace.”
23. Remember… Engineering Controls reduce exposure to blood and OPIM
Suction Canisters
No-slip Flooring
Sharps Containers
As well as… Engineered Sharps
24. Needleless SystemsNew Definition Device that does not use a needle for:
Collection of bodily fluids
Administration of medication/fluids
Any other procedure with potential percutaneous exposure to a contaminated sharp
25. Engineered SharpsNew Definition Non-needle sharp or a needle with a built-in safety feature or mechanism that effectively reduces the risk of an exposure incident.
26. Hypodermic syringes with “Self-Sheathing” safety feature
27. Hypodermic syringes with “Retractable Technology” safety feature
28. Phlebotomy needle with “Self-Blunting” safety feature
29. “Add-on” safety feature
30. Retracting lancets with safety features
31. Disposable scalpels with safety features
32. Engineering and Work Practice Controls Selection of engineering and work practice controls is dependent on the employer’s exposure determination.
33. Exposure Determination The employer must:
Identify worker exposures to blood or OPIM
Sticks and… SPLASHES AND SPLATTERS
Review all processes and procedures with exposure potential
Re-evaluate when new processes or procedures are used
34. Engineering and Work Practice Controls (con’t) The employer must:
Evaluate available engineering controls (safer medical devices)
Train employees on safe use and disposal
Implement appropriate engineering controls/devices
35. Recordkeeping: OSHA 1910.1030(h)
36. Sharps Injury Log At a minimum, the log must contain, for each incident:
Type and brand of device involved
Department or area of incident
Description of incident
37. Surveillance
38. Why Sharps Injury Surveillance? Benefits of aggregated data
Confidential
Identify devices that continue to result in injuries
Serve as early warning for device or design-related injuries
Identify job class, procedures, work activities, that continue to be at risk for sharps injuries.
39. Overview of Sharps Injury Surveillance Program in US California the first state in the U.S. to develop a voluntary sharps injury registry
Collects data from acute care hospitals, home health agencies, and skilled nursing facilities.
Collected 1940 reports from 442 facilities (Jan. 1998 - Jan. 2000).
2-year sharps surveillance
Compile a list of safety device
Aim at educating public with sharps / bloodborne pathogens
Compile a list of available device
2-year sharps surveillance
Compile a list of safety device
Aim at educating public with sharps / bloodborne pathogens
Compile a list of available device
40. Research Methods Developed injury log form for reporting
Sent survey letter to 2550 California acute care hospitals, skilled nursing facilities and home health care agencies requesting data
Sent follow up post card; second mailing
Data coding, entry, cleaning and analyses
41. Inclusion Criteria Only includes injuries from sharp objects (not splashes, bites, or exposure to mucous membranes)
Only injuries from contaminated sharps
Injuries to employees (not patients or visitors)
42. Sharps Injury Log Form Description of the Exposure Incident
Job Classification
Department or work area
Procedure
Use of safety device (types & brands)
How the incident occurred
Body part injured
Use of protective mechanism
Opinion on safety device
43. Results of Surveillance Reported Injuries by Facility Type
Recording Format
Gender and Age of Injured Person
Shift Worked
Job Class
Location
Procedure
44. Results of Surveillance (Con’t) Facility Type vs. Injury Circumstances
Job Class. vs. Injury Circumstances
Job Class. vs. Procedure
Injury Circumstances vs. Procedure
Injury Circumstances vs. Type of Device
Department Location vs. Procedure
45. Conclusion from the Surveillance Majority of reports were not in standardized format
Nurses contribute to the majority number of injuries
Substantial number of injuries in Patient Room
High risk procedures: injection, venous blood taking
Most frequent injury circumstances: during use of sharp
Devices associated with injuries: disposable needle/syringe
46. Where are we now?
47. Our status: Sharps injury is classified as IOD
Only reported and documented on IOD form
Not designed explicitly for sharps injury
Does not serve the purpose for risk assessment and surveillance either
Rooms to improve by…
48. Future Plans/Recommendations for Department of Health Survey of Healthcare Professional in DH on Occupational Exposure to Blood and Body Fluids
Establish and encourage the use of standardized reporting mechanism
Set up a platform for central reporting and surveillance
Collect sharps injury logs
Change voluntary nature of reporting
Develop recommendations based on injury circumstance and device type