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National Safety Council

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... leakproof on sides and bottom, puncture resistant and labeled or color-coded) ... Puncture injury (most common mode) Exposure Determination ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: National Safety Council


1
National Safety Council
  • What is OSHA?
  • What is the OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard?
  • What steps are necessary to meet the standard?
    (documented training session content, date
    (during workday annually and instructor
    qualifications)
  • Who is covered by the standard?
  • Good Samaritan Acts are not covered

2
What is a Bloodborne Pathogen?
  • Types of Pathogens (HIV, HBV, syphilis)
  • Transmission of Pathogens
  • Illness symptoms and signs

3
Hepatitis B (HBV)
  • Swelling, soreness, and loss of normal liver
    functions
  • Common Symptoms
  • Weakness
  • Fatigue
  • Loss of appetite
  • Nausea
  • Abdominal pain
  • Fever
  • Headache
  • jaundice

4
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
  • 1 in 250 persons in USA infected with HIV
    affects immune system T4 cells less able to fight
    disease
  • Common Symptoms
  • None
  • Night sweats
  • Weight loss
  • Fever
  • Fatigue
  • Gland pain or swelling
  • Muscle and joint pain
  • Impossible to tell difference between HBV and
    HIV by looking at a person

5
Prevention Strategies
  • Engineering controls
  • Work practice controls
  • Personal Protective Equipment
  • Training
  • Head, eye face, ear, respiratory, torso, arm
    hand, and foot leg protection
  • Universal Precautions

6
Engineering Controls
  • Sharps container
  • Safety shields
  • Self-retracting needle sheaths
  • Hand washing facilities
  • Antiseptic towelettes
  • Safety is designed into the tools and workplace

7
Work Practice Controls
  • The behaviors necessary to effectively use
    equipment with engineered safety controls.
  • Appropriate use of sharps container
  • Use of hand washing facilities
  • (PRIMARY MEANS OF PREVENTION)

8
Universal Precautions
  • Concept of infection control
  • Treating all human blood and bodily fluids as
    infectious

9
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
  • Face shields
  • Masks and goggles
  • If eye protection then face mask is needed
  • Aprons
  • CPR microshields
  • Gowns
  • Gloves
  • Use of personal protective equipment does not
    guarantee protection from bloodborne pathogens
  • Remove dirtiest to cleanest

10
Universal Precautions
  • OSHA defined
  • Other potentially infectious material
  • Semen
  • Vaginal secretions
  • Cerebrospinal fluid
  • Pleural fluid
  • Saliva from dental procedures
  • Any bodily fluid with visible blood
  • Any unidentified bodily fluid

11
Universal Precautions
  • Precautions not required
  • Feces
  • Nasal secretions
  • Sputum
  • Sweat
  • Tears
  • Urine
  • Vomitus
  • unless they contain visible blood

12
Immunization
  • Vaccine available (Hepatitis B - not 100
    effective)
  • No cost to employee/during work hours
  • Immunization schedule (3 doses in upper arm over
    6 months)
  • Contraindications for immunization (side effects
    are minimal)

13
Exposure Control
  • Hand washing and hand washing facilities
  • Reducing splash, spray and spattering
  • Prohibited use of mouth pipetting or suctioning
  • Prohibited in work areas
  • Eating, drinking or smoking
  • Applying cosmetics or lip balm
  • Handling contact lenses

14
Exposure Control
  • Personal protective equipment
  • Must be provided at no cost
  • Must be used
  • Must be removed prior to leaving the work area
  • Must be laundered and cared for by the employer
  • Limited exceptions to PPE use

15
Exposure Control
  • Identify surfaces that may become contaminated
  • Follow a regular cleaning schedule
  • Use reusable latex gloves for cleaning
  • Use EPA approved cleaning solutions

16
Labeling
  • Define the acceptable containers (closeable,
    leakproof on sides and bottom, puncture resistant
    and labeled or color-coded)
  • When is labeling necessary (to protect
    everyone)(on containers to refrigerate/freeze,
    store, dispose of, transport or ship blood)
  • Regulate waste (dispose of ASAP)

17
Transmission
  • Mode of Transmission
  • Mucous membrane
  • Non-intact skin
  • Contact with contaminated surfaces
  • Injections
  • Puncture injury (most common mode)

18
Exposure Determination
  • If your job requires or might require you to come
    in contact with blood or other potentially
    infectious material then you are covered under
    the OSHA Bloodborne Pathogen Standard
  • High risk ex. draw blood, clean sharps, wash
    laundry, assist person in a fight
  • Low risk ex. mopping floor, taking throat
    culture, taking BP, eating in hospital cafeteria
  • (employees bear no out-of-pocket expense to meet
    requirements developed with the idea of
    protecting employee as much as possible from
    bloodborne pathogens)

19
Post-Exposure Reporting
  • Minimizing exposure
  • Reporting the exposure incident
  • How, when and where
  • Whos blood or bodily fluid
  • Opportunity for confidential blood testing

20
Post-Exposure Reporting
  • Confidentiality
  • Your employer is required to collect specific
    information but is not entitled to release this
    information without your expressed written
    consent except as required by law

21
Exposure Determination
  • Written exposure control plan
  • Employee is to have access to a copy of this plan
  • Exposure determination
  • List of job classifications with occupational
    exposure
  • List of tasks and procedures in which
    occupational exposure occurs
  • Schedule and method of implementation
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