1 / 42

Workbook for Designing, Implementing and Evaluating a Sharps Injury Prevention Program

Workbook for Designing, Implementing and Evaluating a Sharps Injury Prevention Program. The Problem of Sharps Injuries. CDC estimates ~385,000 sharps injuries annually among hospital-based healthcare personnel* Sharps injuries are a hazard Increased risk for bloodborne virus transmission

airell
Télécharger la présentation

Workbook for Designing, Implementing and Evaluating a Sharps Injury Prevention Program

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. Workbook for Designing, Implementing and Evaluating a Sharps Injury Prevention Program

  2. The Problem of Sharps Injuries • CDC estimates ~385,000 sharps injuries annually among hospital-based healthcare personnel* • Sharps injuries are a hazard • Increased risk for bloodborne virus transmission • Cost to workers and healthcare system *Panlilio AL, et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol, 2004

  3. Sharps Injuries Are Preventable Preventability of Needlestick Injuries involving Hollow-bore Needles in 78 NaSH Hospitals, June 1995 to December 2004 (n=11,625)

  4. Bloodborne Virus Transmission Virus Hepatitis B virus (HBV) Hepatitis C virus (HCV) Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) Risk from Percutaneous Injury 6%-30%* Approx. 2% 0.3% *Risk applies to unvaccinated workers only

  5. The Costs of Sharps Injuries • Medical costs • $71 to ~$5,000 per exposure* • Lost time from work • Emotional cost • Long-term costs * O’Malley EM, et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol, 2007

  6. Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act (2000) • Federal OSHA standard requires: • Use of engineering and work practice controls • Recordkeeping on a Sharps Injury Log • Written Exposure Control Plan

  7. Exposure Control Plan • Must reflect changes in technology use for prevention • Document annual consideration, evaluation of safer sharps devices • Employers are required to solicit input from direct patient care personnel regarding the identification and selection of engineering and work practice controls.

  8. Recent OSHA Citations • July 2003: Fined nursing home $92,500 for “serious” and “willful” violations • Levied maximum fine for willful violations: failure to utilize sharps safety devices • September 2003: Hospital fined $9,000 • Complaint filed by staff that safety-engineered devices were not available Source: Advances in Exposure Prevention

  9. Purpose of Workbook • Assist healthcare facilities to organize a sharps injury prevention program • All-in-one tool that helps: • Develop and maintain aprogram • Enhance or augmentexisting programs

  10. The Workbook will help… • Assessa facility’s sharps injury prevention program • Document a prevention plan and implementation of activities • Evaluate the impact of prevention measures

  11. Contents of the Workbook • Overview of sharps injury epidemiology and prevention strategies • Organization-wide method of developing prevention program • Based on model of Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) • Program model of operational processes • Program resources

  12. Organizational Steps • Develop organizational capacity • Form a multidisciplinary leadership team • Assess the operational processes of the prevention program • Prepare a baseline profile of sharps injuries and current prevention activities

  13. Organizational Steps (cont’d.) • Determine prevention priorities • Develop and implement Action Plan • Action plan focuses on reducing injuries and improving program activities • Monitor performance improvement

  14. Operational Processes Essential activities of any sharps injury prevention program

  15. Operational Processes • The 5 processes: • Develop an institution-wide culture of safetyin the work environment • Promote reporting of sharps injuries and injury hazards • Analyze sharps injury data for prevention planning • Select/evaluate sharps injury prevention devices • Educate and train healthcare personnel

  16. Operational Processes: Culture of safety: the shared commitment of management and employees to ensure the safety of patients and personnel • Measures of safety culture are linked to: • Reductions in sharps injuries • Personnel compliance with safe work practices • Availability of devices with engineered safety features • Workbook contains: • Strategies for creating a culture of safety • Survey form for measuring the safety “climate” among personnel Culture of Safety

  17. Operational Processes: • Under-reporting of sharps injuries continues to be an issue at healthcare facilities • Varies by occupation, department and facility • Is influenced by the safety culture and safety climate • CDC NaSH data from 38 hospitals, 1996-2003 • only 45% of total injuries are reported Injury Reporting

  18. Operational Processes: • Workbook tools: • Reporting survey • Blood and body fluid exposure report form • Sharps injury hazard observation and report forms • Root cause analysis form Injury Reporting (cont’d.)

  19. Operational Processes: • Analysis of sharps injury data drives prevention planning • Workbook features: • Instructions for compiling and analyzing data • Directions for calculating sharps injury rates Analysis of Data

  20. Operational Processes: • A Systematic approach for selecting devices ensures: • comprehensive review of devices • thorough selection process • Key elements of this approach: • Team input • Review current device use, prioritize devices for consideration • In-use evaluation of new devices Selection/Evaluation of Devices

  21. Operational Processes: • Workbook tools: • Survey of device use (by department or unit) • Device pre-selection worksheet • Device evaluation form Selection/Evaluation of Devices (cont’d.)

  22. Operational Processes: • Workbook features: • General guidance on sharps injury prevention education and training • List of websites of other educational resources Education and Training of Personnel

  23. Other Resources • Sections on safe work practices and problem-specific strategies for preventing sharps injuries • Cost analysis • Sample form for estimating cost of needlesticks • Sample form for estimating device-specific injury costs • Sample form for estimating device implementation costs

  24. Summary • Sharps injuries are an important concern • Increased risk of disease transmission • High costs to personnel and healthcare system • Most sharps injuries are preventable • Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act requires prevention efforts be undertaken

  25. Summary (cont’d.) • Workbook is a comprehensive collection of valuable resources • Valuable in development of sharps injury prevention program • Potential to enhance current prevention activities

  26. Summary (cont’d.) • Useful Workbook tools may benefit other organizational processes by: • Enhancing teamwork • Improving perceptions of safety culture • Reducing costs due to more effective, focused prevention efforts

  27. Optional Extra Slides

  28. Sharps Injuries at [insert your hospital name] by Distribution of Safety Device

  29. Sharps Injuries at [insert your hospital name] by Device

  30. Sharps Injuries at [insert your hospital name] by Work Location

  31. Sharps Injuries at [insert your hospital name] by Occupational Group

More Related