1 / 24

BLOODBORNE PATHOGENS

BLOODBORNE PATHOGENS. Tamara James, RN, BSN, MSN Director of Nursing-Hobbs Schools. BLOODBORNE DISEASES. Microorganisms are carried in blood and cause disease Many diseases but OSHA training deals mainly with Hepatitis B (HBV) and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). HEPATITIS B (HBV).

jeastman
Télécharger la présentation

BLOODBORNE PATHOGENS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BLOODBORNE PATHOGENS Tamara James, RN, BSN, MSN Director of Nursing-Hobbs Schools

  2. BLOODBORNE DISEASES • Microorganisms are carried in blood and cause disease • Many diseases but OSHA training deals mainly with Hepatitis B (HBV) and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)

  3. HEPATITIS B (HBV) • Approximately 300,000 cases per year in the US • Small % are fatal • Hepatitis means inflammation of liver • HBV spread mainly through blood to blood contact • Can lead to cirrhosis and liver cancer

  4. No cure or treatment for HBV • Can develop antibodies which help get over the infection and protect from getting it again • Many types of Hepatitis • Can have different types of Hepatitis at the same time • Can survive in blood for up to 7 days

  5. HBV Symptoms • Mild flu-like symptoms such as fatigue, stomach pain, loss of appetite, nausea • As disease progresses-jaundice and dark urine most likely occur • After exposure, may take 1-9 months before symptoms develop

  6. HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS (HIV) • AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is caused by HIV • Once infected with HIV, it may take years for AIDS to develop • HIV weakens the body so it cannot fight other diseases • AIDS is fatal, treatment is improving, but still no cure

  7. Average of 50,000 newly infected people each year in the US • As of 2011, 1.1 million people in US living with HIV/AIDS in the US • As of 2010, 34.2 million people living globally with HIV/AIDS • In 2010, 1.8 million deaths from HIV/AIDS were recorded world wide • Numbers could be higher because not all people know they have the disease-1 in 6 have not been diagnosed

  8. HIV is fragile and will not survive long outside the body • Estimated that the chance of contracting the disease is 0.4%. However, because it is such a devastating disease, all precautions must be taken to avoid exposure

  9. HIV-Stages • 1st stage-when person is infected-may have no or few symptoms for many years • 2nd stage-swollen lymph glands or persons are diagnosed with lesser diseases that the body cannot fight • 3rd stage-AIDS-unable to fight diseases and infections lead to death (usually pneumonia)

  10. HIV-symptoms • Symptoms vary • Weakness • Fever • Sore throat • Nausea • Headaches • Diarrhea • White coating on tongue • Weight loss • Swollen lymph glands • If exposed and develop any symptoms, seek healthcare immediately

  11. Hepatitis and HIV/AIDS

  12. MODES OF TRANSMISSION • INFECTED BLOOD • SEMEN • VAGINAL SECRETIONS • CEREBROSPINAL FLUID • SYNOVIAL FLUID • PERITONEAL FLUID • AMNIOTIC FLUID • SALIVA (in dental procedures) • ANY BODY FLUID THAT IS VISIBLY CONTAMINATED • Exposure mainly during first aid and cleaning

  13. Transmission most commonly through: • Sexual contact • Sharing of needles • From mothers to babies at/before birth • Accidental puncture from contaminated needles, broken glass or other sharp objects-such as safety pins, pens, pencils • Contact between broken or damaged skin and infected body fluids-pushing down trash that could hide a contaminated sharp • Contact between mucous membranes and infected body fluids

  14. Unbroken skin provides a barrier • Infected blood can enter your system through: • Open sores • Cuts • Abrasions • Acne • Sunburn/blisters • Mucous membranes of eyes, nose and mouth-if you touch a contaminated surface a pathogen could enter your body by rubbing your eye or touching your nose

  15. STANDARD PRECAUTIONS • A prevention strategy in which all blood is considered to be infectious and is treated as such

  16. PERSONAL PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT (PPE) • Gloves, goggles, face shields, gowns • To protect yourself • Essential to have a barrier between you and the potentially infectious material • Always wear in an exposure • Remove and replace if torn or punctured • Remove before leaving area • Goggles and face shields with splashing risk

  17. HANDWASHING • Most important item to prevent transmission of bloodborne pathogens • Use antibacterial soap • Wash 10-20 seconds (sing happy birthday) and scrub all surfaces • Rinse well and dry • If no sink, use antiseptic cleanser until sink is available

  18. Wash hands immediately after exposure to blood and after removing gloves • If working in an area where there is likelihood of exposure, DO NOT eat, drink, smoke, apply cosmetics, or handle contacts • Never put food where potentially infectious hazardous materials are found

  19. CLEANING • Clean infectious material with 1:10 household bleach and water (1/4 cup per gallon) • Lysol or other EPA registered tuberculocidal disinfectant • Cover spill with paper towels, pour bleach over towel and leave 10 minutes • Pathogens are killed before you start wiping up, covering reduces risk of splashing

  20. Custodial staff will clean spills if they are notified • Never use a student to clean a spill or handle blood of another student

  21. SHARPS AND NEEDLES • Needles and sharps (broken glass) must be disposed of in sharps containers (NEVER in a trashcan) • Sharps containers are red and are located in the nurses offices throughout the district • Broken glass should be swept or brushed into a dustpan, never handled using hands

  22. EMERGENCY PROCEDURE • Use standard precautions • If exposure, wash area thoroughly with soap and water • If splashed in eye or mucous membrane, flush with running water for at least 15 minutes • Report exposure to your principal/supervisor and contact Idania Hernandez at Central office to fill out accident form

  23. HEPATITIS VACCINE • Employee may request blood testing and Hep B vaccine in case of exposure • Hepatitis B vaccine is a three series vaccine that is covered under the HMS insurance plans • First dose, one month later is the second dose, third dose is at lease five months later • These help to build immunity to the Hep B virus

  24. REMINDERS • Gloves in all buildings-WEAR WHEN NEEDED • Elementary schools have first aid kits in rooms and fanny packs for recess • First aid kits in selected secondary classes such as home economics, shop, etc… • Don’t use hands or feet to push down overflowing trash cans and hold trash away from your body • HANDWASHING is essential protection

More Related