Title: Infectious Diseases and Nurses
1 Infectious Diseases and Nurses
- Historical Insights Can Guide Future Action
Kate McPhaul, PhD, MPH, RN University of Maryland
Work and Health Research Center June 8,
2007 Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA)
2Objectives
- List two old and one new infectious disease known
to be transmitted to healthcare workers today - Discuss the three classic public health
interventions for control of infectious disease
transmission - Contrast the occupational safety paradigm
including hierarchy of controls with classic
pubic health protection and critique the
implications for protecting healthcare workers - Describe the elements of the blood borne pathogen
standard and relate to the hierarchy of controls
for protecting workers from airborne infectious
diseases
3- Historical perspectives on TB, SARS, Influenza
and Healthcare Workers - Model Standard - Bloodborne Pathogen and
Needlestick Safety Act - What do we do NOW to prevent nurses from
contracting infectious diseases in future
outbreaks?
4Even super heros can succumb to infectious
diseases.
5- How many infectious agents may be transmitted
and/or acquired by nurses in healthcare settings?
6Infectious Diseases in Healthcare According to
the CDC, the following may be transmitted and/or
acquired in healthcare settings
- MRSA - Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
Aureus - Mumps
- Norovirus
- Parvovirus
- Poliovirus
- Pneumonia
- Rubella
- SARS
- S. pneumoniae (Drug resistant)
- Tuberculosis
- Varicella (Chickenpox)
- Viral Hemorrhagic Fever (Ebola)
- VISA - Vancomycin Intermediate Staphylococcus
aureus - VRE - Vancomycin-resistant enterococci
- Acinetobacter
- Bloodborne Pathogens
- Burkholderia cepacia
- Chickenpox (Varicella)
- Clostridium Difficile
- Clostridium Sordellii
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
- Ebola (Viral Hemorrhagic Fever)
- Gastrointestinal (GI) Infections
- Hepatitis A
- Hepatitis B
- Hepatitis C
- HIV/AIDS
- Influenza
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8Blood borne pathogen transmission to healthcare
workers
- In addition to Hepatitis B and C, and HIV from
1996 2005 there were published case reports of
60 pathogens 26 viruses, 18 bacterial/rickettsia,
13 parasites, and 3 yeast known to
occupationally infect HCWs. (Tarantola, AJIC,
2006)
9Occupational Deaths from Infectious Diseases
Hepatitis B
- 1983 10,000 HCWs exposed
- 5-10 (500-1000) develop chronic infection
- 15-25 (75-200) die/year
- Risk of Hep B has diminished gt90 due to Hep B
Vaccine - gt30 HCWs decline vaccine resulting 400
HCWs/year becoming infected
10Occupational Deaths from Infectious Diseases
Hepatitis C
- CDC estimates that Hepatitis C is prevalent in
1.8 of US population, same for HCWs - 1-3 of percutaneous exposures result in Hep C
infection to HCW - 3-8 HCWs annually die from Hepatitis C (estimate
based on needlestick rate)
11Occupational Deaths from Infectious Diseases HIV
- 138 HCWs acquired AIDs from a percutaneous
exposure - CDC methods do not collect death information
- Personal friend, Meta Snyder, died from AIDS
acquired via needlestick but did not meet the CDC
definition
12Occupational Deaths from Infectious Diseases
Internationally
- Hemorrhagic fevers
- TB in Malawi, Ethiopia and South Africa
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15The TB Debate TB is good for Nurses
16Early History
- Aristotle in approaching the consumptive one
breathes his pernicious air, one takes the
disease because there is in this air something
disease producing - Sepkowitz, 1994
17Tuberculosis
- 1699 tuberculosis became a reportable disease in
Italy - Some pathologists refuse to do mandated autopsies
fearing illness - French MD Laennec dies from TB refusing to
believe he could acquire it from performing
autopsies
18Tuberculosis
- 1882 study showed no HCWs infected in a large TB
Sanatorium TB might not even be contagious - Clapp of Boston believed in contagion but this
view was not pervasive
19More data shows risk of TB for HCWs
- Studies of nursing students in Europe and US show
high rates of tuberculin conversation (79-100) - Standard 1920s pulmonary text There is no
danger from the expired air of consumptives. For
this reason a TB sanatorium is probably the
safest place one can be so far as the dangers of
infection is concerned.
20Why was consensus delayed?Sepkowitz, 1994
- Acknowledging risk might scare women away from
nursing profession - Some said increased surveillance not increased
risk - Middle road view Yes, infections are occurring
but disease is rare - Living right prevents disease
21Reducing the risk
22Reducing the Risk
- Mandatory chest x-rays upon admission for all
patients - Effective chemotherapy and routine prophylaxis
- TB rates in population declined until 1980s
23Occupational Deaths from Infectious Diseases TB
- At least nine HCWs who were also
immunocompromised died from TB infection in the
80s and 90s. - 6-8 HCWs have also died from TB treatment to
multi-drug resistant TB
24Occupational Deaths from Infectious Diseases SARS
- 8098 cases
- 774 deaths (9.6)
- 1707 (21)
- cases were HCWs
- 378 (57) of cases in
- healthcare were HCWs
- Number of HCW fatalities
- not known!!!
25Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) -
Timeline
- Mar 2003 HCW with unexplained pneumonia in
Vietnam dies - Mar June 2003 - Toronto 2 phase outbreak
primarily driven by nosocomial infections - Mar June Taiwan 2 phases 1 in travelers, 1
in hospitals - July 2003 WHO declares outbreak over
26SARS and HCWsMcDonald, 2004 Emerging Infectious
Diseases
Characteristics Toronto Taiwan
Total Cases 375 N/A
Probable 247 (66) 668
Suspected 128 (34) N/A
Deaths 44 (12) 72 (11)
Healthcare-related 271 (72) 370 (55)
Healthcare workers 164 (44) 120 (18)
27SARS in Healthcare Facilities
McDonald, 2004 Emerging Infectious Diseases
- Unrecognized SARS Patients
- Minimal infection control practices in ER
- ER high risk
- Virus concentrations highest in patients 10 days
after infection when symptoms are worsening
28SARS in Healthcare Facilities
McDonald, 2004 Emerging Infectious Diseases
- Transmission appears to be
- Droplet
- Direct contact
- Limited airborne
29SARS in Healthcare Facilities
McDonald, 2004 Emerging Infectious Diseases
- Important Considerations
- Aerosol-generating procedures
- Super spreaders
- Lack of PPE
- Overwhelming hospital resources such as negative
pressure ventilated rooms - SARS Tent/SARS Screening station
- No rapid diagnostic test
- Using epidemiologic links
30SARS Ethical FrameworkKey Values
- Individual liberty
- Protection of the public
- Proportionality
- Reciprocity
- Transparency
- Privacy
- Protection from undue stigmatization
- Duty to provide care
- Equity
- Solidarity
31Lawrence Mass 1918
32Why does health care lag behind other sectors in
HS
- False perception that the industry is
self-regulated (JCAHO) - Health care traditionally seen as clean
industry, a place of health - Focus on curative rather than preventive care
- Primarily a female workforce
- A low unionization rate
(Lipscomb
Borwegen, 2000)
33HCW vulnerability
- Socialized to believe that care giving requires
self sacrifice, even of their own health - Some hazards considered part of the job
- HCWs become patients (often uninsured) in the
course of caring for others - Issues of race, class, gender
34Economic Costs of Staff Injuries/Illnesses
- Medical care and follow-up
- Worker disability
- Staff replacement
- Loss of experienced workers
- Cost of importing workers to replace injured US
workers - Reduced productivity
- Poor patient outcomes
35Classic Public Health Interventions
- Handwashing
- Vaccination
- Isolating infected patients
36Health and Safety Programs A Framework for
Prevention
- Management commitment and employee involvement
- Worksite analysis
- Hazard control
- Training
- Evaluation
37H S Program Elements
- All necessary, none sufficient
- Critical for any and all hazards
- Success dependent on genuine team work
- Cant be successful without management commitment
- Direct care and support staff expertise are
essential
38Hazard Control Hierarchy of Controls
- Substitution with a less hazardous chemical or
device such as antimicrobials that dont cause
asthma - Engineering Controls - modify or control the
hazard at the source, such as ventilation hoods? - Administrative Controls reduce the amount of
exposure to hazard via policies and procedures - Personal Protective Equipment - gloves,
respirators, protective clothing
39Estimated reduction in adverse outcomes with
improved staffing
Buerhaus, P.I. et al Strengthening Hospital
Nursing. Health Affairs 21(5), 2002
40How do high workload lead to poor patient
outcomes?
- Impaired nurse-physician (and other HCW)
collaboration, - Poor nurse-patient communication,
- HCW fatigue, lack of concentration
- HCW burnout, depression, reduced empathy
- Job dissatisfaction
- HCW injury and illness
- HCW disability and/or job change
- Carayon Gurses (2005)
41What do we know about staffing and HCW injuries?
- MNA study found a 9 decrease in RNs was
associated with a 65 increase in
injuries/illnesses (Shogren, 1996) - High workloads associated with 50-200 increase
in needlestick injuries/near misses, (Clark,
2002) - Adverse work schedule and health care system
changes associated with neck, shoulder, back MSD
(Lipscomb, 2004).
42Extreme work schedules, injuries and patient care
(JAMA, Sept. 06)
- 84 of interns worked gt than ACGME limits 67
worked gt 30 consecutive hrs. - Odds of exposure to sharps or contaminated body
fluids increase 61 when interns worked gt 20
consecutive hrs. compared with interns working lt
12 hrs. - 24 hrs of continuous wakefulness causes
impairment of cognitive performance comparable to
that induced by a blood alcohol concentration of
100 mg/dl (legal intoxication in most states).
43Blood borne Pathogen Risks
- 2-40 risk of developing Hepatitis B
- 3-10 risk of developing Hepatitis C
- 560-1,120/year
- 85 become chronic carriers
- 0.3 risk of transmission of HIV
- gt1000 workers will contract Hepatitis B,
Hepatitis C, or HIV/year
44What do we know?
- 300,000 needlesticks continue to occur/year.
- Needlesticks and BB infections are extremely
costly. - Safety syringe have reduced incidence (gt 50) but
much room for improvement. - Enforcement of Safe Needlestick Act is limited.
45OSHA BBP Standard (1991)
- Require universal precautions
- Required Hep B immunization
- Cases went from 17,000 (1983) to 400/yr
- Engineering controls (safe needles) were to be
used where available - Dentists claimed (in the docket) if they were
forced to where gloves, patients would not see
them.
46Safe Needle Act of 2000
- Unanimous bipartisan support
- Clarifies the need for employers to use safe
needles - Requires front line worker participation in
product selection committees - Requires employers to maintain a log of injuries
from contaminated sharps.
47Airborne Infections
- TB, SARS, influenza
- Seasonal flu - lt40 immunization among HCW
- Pandemic flu preparedness
- Aerosol vs droplet transmission
- Respiratory protection
- Type, fit testing, stockpiles
48What do we know?
- Short staffing leads to sick staff.
- Sick staff lead to sicker patients.
- Current levels of staff immunization inadequate.
- Current levels of available respiratory
protection (N95s) inadequate for pandemic flu.
49History of Regulations to Prevent HCW Exposure to
Airborne Hazards
- Respiratory Protection Standard (1971, 1998)
- Proposed TB rule (1997) withdrawn (2003)
- Continuation of the Wicker Amendment
(appropriations rider) - CA is enforcing the annual fit testing
requirement.
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51Conclusions
- The risks to nurses are historically and
currently substantial - Early research is not always accurate
- Educate other RNs and HCWs
- Argue, lobby, insist upon N95 PPE and general
preparedness of your facility - Join or get on the agenda of H and S Committee
52Questions and future contact
- mcphaul_at_son.umaryland.edu