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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: healthcare workers + health care + pathogens  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

UC Davis Medical Center On Hospital-Acquired Infections
KCRA.com, CA -
UC Davis Medical Center has a rigorous and coordinated infection prevention and control program in place to protect patients, health care workers and ...
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Medical News Today (press release), UK - May 8, 2008
HIV-related knowledge, attitudes & risk perception amongst nurses, doctors & other healthcare workers in rural India. Indian J Med Res 122; 258-264. ...
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all 2 news articles »
Advantage Medical Devices Receives FDA Clearance For VantageCath
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Ortho SuperSite, NJ - Apr 24, 2008
The CDC outlined several key strategies to prevent the transmission of HIV and other bloodborne pathogens to health-care personnel. ...
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Health-care workers born before 1957 without other evidence of immunity should now consider 1 dose of live mumps vaccine. During an outbreak, a second dose ...
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Source: Google News

Compliance with universal precautions among health care workers at three regional hospitals. -
RRM Gershon, D Vlahov, SA Felknor, D Vesley, PC … - AJIC: American Journal of Infection Control, 1995 - pt.wkhealth.com
... Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations-accredited ... had been in
the health care field for a ... Most workers were employed full-time, working 40 ...

Handwashing Compliance by Health Care Workers The Impact of Introducing an Accessible, Alcohol-Based … -
WE Bischoff, TM Reynolds, CN Sessler, MB Edmond, … - Archives of Internal Medicine, 2000 - Am Med Assoc
... short-term feedback intervention program to health care workers. ... final monograph
for health care antiseptic drug ... on mortality in intensive care: examination of ...

BLOODBORNE PATHOGEN TRANSMISSION IN HEALTH CARE WORKERS Risks and Prevention Strategies -
DM Cardo, DM Bell - Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 1997 - Elsevier
... 5.07 to 2.66 per physician per patient care month because of ... to offer the hepatitis
B vaccine to health care and public safety workers with occupational ...

Risk and management of blood-borne infections in health care workers -
EM Beltrami, IT Williams, CN Shapiro, ME … - Clinical Microbiology Reviews, 2000 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... is vital for the appropriate management and care of HCWs ... up serologic testing (D.
Cardo and the Health Care Worker Surveillance Study ... Soc. Healthcare Epidemiol ...

Preventing bloodborne pathogen transmission from health-care workers to patients. The CDC … -
DM Bell, CN Shapiro, CA Ciesielski, ME Chamberland - Surg Clin North Am, 1995 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... the risk of bloodborne pathogen transmission from ... Ultimately, both health-care workers
and patients will be ... exposure without adversely affecting patient care. ...

… Alcohol-Based Gel on Microbial Colonization of Artificial Fingernails Worn by Health Care Workers -
SA McNeil, CL Foster, SA Hedderwick, CA Kauffman - Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2001 - UChicago Press
... Linked to a Healthcare Worker With Onychomycosis ... Hand Hygiene in Health-Care
Settings: recommendations of the Healthcare Infection Control ...

Risk of hepatitis C seroconversion after occupational exposures in health care workers. -
V Puro, N Petrosillo, G Ippolito - AJIC: American Journal of Infection Control, 1995 - pt.wkhealth.com
... C virus infection in healthcare workers: risk of ... HIV infection in health care workers:
Italian multicenter ... B virus, and other bloodborne pathogens in health ...

Health care workers' experience with postexposure management of bloodborne pathogen exposures: A … -
RRM Gershon, PA Flanagan, C Karkashian, M Grimes, … - AJIC: American Journal of Infection Control, 2000 - pt.wkhealth.com
... with universal precautions among healthcare workers at three ... rates at an acute care
hospital ... immunodeficiency virus infection in health care workers: an overview ...

Occupationally Acquired Infections in Health Care Workers: Part II -
KA Sepkowitz - Annals of Internal Medicine, 1996 - annals.highwire.org
... needlestick injury in healthcare workers [Letter ... for primary cytomegalovirus infection
among pediatric health-care workers. ... risk associated with patient care. ...

… pachydermatis in an Intensive Care Nursery Associated with Colonization of Health Care Workers' Pet … -
HJ Chang, HL Miller, N Watkins, MJ Arduino, DA … - New England Journal of Medicine, 1998 - content.nejm.org
... that are emerging as nosocomial pathogens, particularly in ... any infant in the intensive
care nursery who ... from the infants and the health care workers and from ...

Source: Google Scholar

Nonhospital health-care workers at substantial risk of exposure to bloodborne pathogens

Mailman School of Public Health study finds association between needlestick injuries and hours worked

December 20, 2007 – In one of the largest studies of its kind, researchers from the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health assessed the risk of exposure to bloodborne pathogens among non-hospital based registered nurses (RNs), and found that nearly one out of 10 of the more than 1100 nurse participants reported at least one needlestick injury in the previous 12 months. Findings of the study are published in the December issue of Industrial Health.

According to Robyn Gershon, DrPH, principal investigator and professor of Sociomedical Sciences at the Mailman School of Public Health, “These rates of exposure are surprising since they are similar to rates reported for hospital-based nurses, even though hospitalized patients generally have high levels of acuity of patient care (i.e., more procedures, including more invasive procedures), than are typically performed in community healthcare settings.” But, as Dr. Gershon and colleagues point out, these findings are not completely unexpected since patient care, including more complex types of care, is increasingly delivered at non-hospital based healthcare facilities, including out-patient clinics, nursing homes, doctor’s offices, patients’ homes, and public health clinics.

The authors note that increasingly complex procedures, many of which involve needles and other sharp instruments, are being performed, primarily by well-trained registered nurses, in these non-hospital settings, thereby increasing the potential risk of exposure. The population at risk is large, since non-hospital based nurses represent a substantial portion of the overall nursing workforce; approximately 40% of the 2.3 million RNs in the U. S. are employed in non-hospital settings. Extrapolated to the entire non-hospital based RN workforce in the United States, the authors estimate that the annual number of needlesticks in the non-hospital RN workforce may be in excess of 145,000 per year.

Importantly, the researchers found that 70% of the exposed nurses were never seen by a healthcare provider at all, even though appropriate and timely follow-up of these incidents can reduce the risk of infection. Findings from the study also suggest that many of the exposed nurses may be at increased risk of infection with serious bloodborne pathogens, such as the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis C virus and hepatitis B virus, since only 65% of these serious exposures were ever formally reported to the nurse’s administrator. Fear of getting into trouble, not having enough time to report, and not knowing how to report an exposure, were the three most common reasons given for not reporting.

According to Dr. Gershon, “These exposures place them at risk of potential infection, therefore efforts to facilitate adequate post-exposure care must be made by administrators; fortunately, rapid access to post-exposure care may significantly help reduce the risk of infection.”

The study also provided important information regarding the risk factors associated with these exposures, which have been well categorized for the hospital-based workforce. The researchers found similar risk factors in the non-hospital based nurses, including heavy patient loads, long working hours, poor safety climate, inadequate training and lack of safety devices. “While the risk factors may be similar for both hospital-based and non-hospital based registered nurses, there are numerous barriers to effective infection control and safety programs in non-hospital settings,” remarked Dr. Gershon. A large proportion (approximately one-third) of non-hospital RNs work in establishments with fewer than 100 employees, and a sizable percentage (16%) work in establishments with fewer than five employees. “As a result, many of these facilities lack on-site infection control and employee health programs,” observed Dr. Gershon and colleagues.

According to Dr. Gershon, “With nearly 900,000 registered nurses employed in a wide range of non-hospital settings, and patient prevalence rates for certain bloodborne pathogens similar or even higher in non-hospital based settings, it is important to develop and implement targeted risk reduction strategies that are tailored to these unique non-hospital settings.” As the authors note, “Clearly it is best to eliminate these types of exposures in the first place. In fact, participatory action teams (PAR), which were formed as part of the study, identified several risk reduction strategies, with an emphasis on improved availability of safety devices to help eliminate or reduce the risk of injury.”

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The study received support from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health Grant #5UO10H04269-03.

About the Mailman School of Public Health

The only accredited school of public health in New York City, and among the first in the nation, Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health provides instruction and research opportunities to more than 950 graduate students in pursuit of masters and doctoral degrees. Its students and more than 300 multi-disciplinary faculty engage in research and service in the city, nation, and around the world, concentrating on biostatistics, environmental health sciences, epidemiology, health policy and management, population and family health, and sociomedical sciences. www.mailman.hs.columbia.edu

 
 
 
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