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COMPREHENSIVE MEDICAL SAFETY PROGRAM

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Title: COMPREHENSIVE MEDICAL SAFETY PROGRAM


1
Risk management in medical laboratories Ana
Stavljenic-Rukavina Zagreb, Croatia
Kornati Islands, Croatia
2
The annual rate of illness and injury
reported for hospital workers is 10 - about the
same as for sheet metal workers, auto mechanics
and paper mill workers(Am J of Nursing, 1992)
3
The most frequent occupation-related illnesses
among hc personel
  • respiratory problems
  • infections
  • dermatitis
  • drug or medication reactions

4
Reasons for the lack of emphasis on employers
health
  • common notion that health professionals are
    capable of maintaining their health without
    assistance
  • availability of informal consultation with
    hospital physician
  • hospitals are oriented toward treating disease
    rather than maintaining health

5
Accidents do not happen, they are caused
  • Safety should be taught and implemented on every
    level in the health care sector
  • Within health care environment, both workers and
    patients are daily confronted with various health
    and safety hazards
  • Therefore, implementation of general safety and
    risk reduction system is mandatory

6
LABORATORY HAZARDSNon-infectious Infectious
  • dusts
  • physical agents
  • chemical agents
  • mutagenic and teratogenic agents
  • skin irritants
  • stress (!)
  • hepatitis
  • AIDS

7
Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS)
  • It is obligatory that the vendors supply MSDS for
    the chemicals
  • Vendor should make sure that the facility
    receives the MSDS before or along the shipment of
    chemical product
  • MSDS must be available for each chemical used in
    an operation
  • Emergency and first aid procedures and handling
    precautions should be given in writen form to
    professionals

8
Infectious occupational health hazards
  • Hepatitis B a model for transmission of
    blood-borne patogens (10-40 of health care
    workers have serologic evidence of past or
    present infection)
  • Infection risk after needle puncture
  • HBV 5-40
  • HCV 1-10
  • HIV lt0.5

9
An individual is at risk for HBV or HIV infection
in proportion to the extent at which he/she is
exposed to blood and body fluids
10
Therefore, effective protection against
blood-borne diseases requires universal
observation of common barrier precautions
11
....which simply means within healthcare
environment, all body fluids and tissues should
be treated as infectious. Equally important
waste disposal!
12
COMPONENTS OF MEDICAL SAFETY
  • Employee safety
  • Patient safety
  • Environment safety

13
ELEMENTS OF EMPLOYEE SAFETY
  • Blood and body fluid exposures
  • Allergies
  • Communicable disease exposures
  • Musculoskeletal injuries
  • Immunization program
  • Systematic review, follow-up, and reporting of
    employee incidents

14
Levels of Biosafety
  • BSL 1 Material not known to consistently cause
    disease in healthy adults.
  • BSL 2 Associated with human disease. Hazard is
    from percutaneous injury, ingestion, or mucous
    membrane exposure.
  • BSL 3 Indigenous or exotic agents with potential
    for aerosol transmission disease may have
    serious or lethal consequences.
  • BSL 4 Dangerous/exotic agents which pose a high
    risk of life-threatening disease,
    aerosol-transmitted lab infections or related
    agents with unknown risk of transmission.

15
Risk Assessment
  • Pathogenicity of material disease incidence and
    severity
  • Routes of Transmission parenteral, airborne or
    ingestion
  • Agent Stability ease of decontamination
  • Infectious Dose LD50
  • Concentration infectious organisms/vol.
    working volume
  • Origin of material - Wild Type, primary cells
  • Availability of effective prophylaxis Hep. B
    vaccine
  • Medical surveillance exposure management
  • Skill level of staff

16
Risk Assessment
  • Risk of Activity same agent can have different
    containment levels at different stages of
    protocol
  • Procedures that produce aerosols have higher risk
  • Procedures using needles or other sharps have
    higher risk
  • Handling blood, serum or tissue samples may have
    lower risk
  • Purified cultures or cell concentrates may have
    higher risk
  • Larger volumes (10 L) have higher risk

17
Primary Containment
  • Lab practices SOP regulating access, biohazard
    warning sign, sharps/needle precautions, SOPs for
    decontamination and waste.
  • Safety equipment biosafety cabinets (BSC),
    sharps containers, sealed rotors.
  • Personal protective equipment (PPE) coat,
    gloves, goggles.
  • Host-vector for rDNA

18
Aerosol Precautions
  • Use BSC for all procedures that may generate
    aerosols.
  • Use centrifuges with biosafety covers.
  • Do not use a syringe for mixing infectious
    fluids.
  • Cultures, tissues, specimens of body fluids,
    etc., are placed in a container with a cover that
    prevents leakage during collection, handling,
    processing, storage, transport or shipping.

19
Needle and Sharps Precautions
  • Precautions are for any contaminated sharp item,
    including needles and syringes, slides, pipettes,
    capillary tubes, and scalpels.
  • Plasticware should be substituted for glassware
    whenever possible.

20
Needle and Sharps Precautions
  • Used disposable needles must not be bent,
    sheared, broken, recapped, removed from
    disposable syringes, or otherwise manipulated by
    hand before disposal. Dispose in
    puncture-resistant containers which must be
    located near work.
  • Non-disposable sharps must be placed in a
    hard-walled container for transport to a
    processing area for decontamination, preferably
    by autoclaving.
  • Broken glassware must not be handled directly by
    hand.Pick up by mechanical means such as a brush
    and dustpan, tongs, or forceps.

21
Human Blood, Tissue and Fluid
  • Occupational Exposure to Bloodborne Pathogens
  • Use BSL 2 work practices and procedures.
  • Additional requirements for HIV work.
  • Everyone needs to be offered the Hepatitis B
    vaccine.
  • Develop specific exposure plan SOPs.
  • Specific training is required.
  • Review needle/syringe use and replace with safe
    devices.
  • Exposure incidents must be followed up.

22
Toxins
  • Use BSL 2 work practices and procedures.
  • Develop a Chemical Hygiene Plan specific to the
    toxin used. Include containment (hoods, biosafety
    cabinets).
  • Some toxins are Select Agents and require
    registration.

23
Select Agents
  • Possession, use and transfer of specific
    biological agents requires registration.
  • Restricted Persons are not allowed to have
    access to these agents.
  • High security and containment must be maintained.

24
Security
  • Control access to areas where biological agents
    or toxins are used and stored.
  • Keep biological agents and toxins in locked
    containers.
  • Know who is in the laboratory, what materials are
    being brought and what materials are being
    removed from the laboratory.
  • Have a protocol for reporting incidents.
  • Have an emergency plan.

25
Emergencies
  • Develop and practice plans for
  • Spills large spills, spills inside BSC
  • Accidental exposures needlesticks, eye/mucous
    membrane splash, breathing aerosols
  • Power/Utility failures BSC, freezers,
    ventilation, lights, water
  • Fires
  • Medical emergencies

26
Waste Disposal
  • Red bag or Regulated Medical Waste
  • All mammalian cells or anything that came in
    contact with mammalian cells
  • All BSL 2 material or anything that came in
    contact with BSL 2 material
  • All needles/syringes regardless of use
  • No need to autoclave this waste prior to
    disposal in EHS red bag/box (material is
    incinerated).

27
CRITICAL ELEMENTSCREATING A SAFETY CULTURE
  • Demonstrate top leadership commitment to safety
  • Swift and visible correction of unsafe conditions
  • Established procedures for reporting unsafe
    conditions
  • Reward workers for following procedures
  • Involve frontline healthcare workers in
    identifying problems and solutions

28
Role of management
  • The scope identifying problem areas and exerting
    specific actions to correct them

29
Development of Safety Program
  • Recognition of hazards
  • Determination (evaluation) of hazards
  • Baseline health and safety survey
  • Sampling strategy
  • Health and safety plan

30
Risk management
  • RISK ASSESSMENT (GENERIC)
  • TAKE THE DESIGN INTENTION
  • l
  • CHANGE IT BY "GUIDE WORDS"
  • l
  • CREATE HYPOTHETICAL DEVIATIONS
  • l
  • CREATE IMAGES
  • l
  • STIMULATE IMAGINATIONS OF THE TEAM TO SEARCH DATA
    FOR REAL DEVIATIONS
  • l
  • EXAMINE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCE
  • HARMLESS HARMFUL
  • IGNORE ELIMINATE OR CONTROL

31
Regulations
  • OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens
  • http//www.osha.gov/SLTC/bloodbornepathogens/index
    .html
  • CDC Select Agents
  • http//www.cdc.gov/od/ohs/lrsat.htm
  • NIH Guidelines for Research Involving Recombinant
    DNA Molecules
  • http//www4.od.nih.gov/oba/rac/guidelines/guidelin
    es.html
  • DOT/CDC Shipping
  • http//www.cdc.gov/od/ohs/biosfty/shipregs.htm
  • CDC Import Permits
  • http//www.cdc.gov/od/ohs/biosfty/imprtper.htm
  • USDA/APHIS Permits
  • http//www.aphis.usda.gov/vs/ncie/

32
Resources
  • CDC Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical
    Laboratories
  • http//www.cdc.gov/od/ohs/biosfty/bmbl4/bmbl4toc.h
    tm
  • ABSA Risk Groups
  • http//www.absa.org/riskgroups/index.htm
  • Canadian MSDSs
  • http//www.hc-sc.gc.ca/pphb-dgspsp/msds-ftss/index
    .html
  • Environmental Health Safety Lab Safety
  • http//www.ehs.sunysb.edu or 2-9672
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