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Needlestick prevention bill includes new
workplace rules
GOVERNMENT & MEDICINE
The measure is
expected to help guard physicians against
injuries but
also adds regulations for them to follow as
employers.
By Geri Aston,
AMNews staff. Nov. 13, 2000. Additional information
Washington --
Each year 600,000 to 800,000 health care workers,
including many
physicians, are accidentally stuck by contaminated needles or
other sharp
objects. A bill that recently passed Congress aims to reduce that
number.
The measure
requires employers, such as hospitals and physician groups, to
study and
implement the use of medical devices with safety features in their
facilities and
offices where appropriate, effective and available. They must
document annual
evaluation and adoption of safer medical devices, such as
needleless
systems or equipment with "sharps injury protections."
Physicians are
second only to nurses in the ranks of health care workers
injured by
needles and other sharp objects. These wounds put physicians
and other
health care workers at risk of HIV and hepatitis B and C infection.
Resident
physicians are at particularly high risk for exposure to patients'
blood or body
fluids through punctures or splashes, said Emilie Osborn,
MD, a family
physician at the Palo Alto Medical Foundation in California.
"There is
pressure to do things and act as though they know how to do
things that
they don't know how to do, "said Dr. Osborn, who authored a
study on the
subject published last year.
Although some
hospitals are models of health care worker safety, "most are
not complying
or complying marginally" with federal rules designed to reduce
needlesticks,
said June Fisher, MD, associate clinical professor of medicine
at the
University of California at San Francisco.
"At private
physician offices, they either don't know anything about
[occupational
safety] or they want to ignore it," she said.
The
legislation, expected to be signed by President Clinton, builds on
and
strengthens a
directive the Occupational Safety and Health Administration
issued to its
inspectors in November 1999. It requires employers in the
health care
field to include frontline workers, such as physicians and nurses,
in the
selection of safer devices.
This
requirement is "vital," said Samuel Hughes, MD, professor of
clinical
anesthesia at
the University of California at San Francisco.
"Those people
are able to judge what equipment will work and be safer,"
said Dr.
Hughes, who chairs an infection control task force for the American
Society of
Anesthesiologists' occupational health panel.
This input also
is necessary to ensure that physicians and others use the new,
safer
equipment, said Jane Perry, spokeswoman for the International Health
Care Worker
Safety Center at the University of Virginia Health System.
"Unless you get
health care worker buy-in, you can get all the safety devices
you want, but
health care workers won't use them. They'll just sit on the
shelf."
The bill,
sponsored by Rep. Cass Ballenger (R, N.C.) and Sen. Jim Jeffords
(R, Vt.), also
requires health care employers to keep a log of all injuries
caused by
needles or other sharp equipment. This provision applies only to
employers with
more than 20 workers.
The log must
include the type and brand of device involved in the incident,
the work area
where the exposure occurred, and an explanation of how the
injury
happened. The goal is to identify patterns to determine which work
areas have a
high risk of exposure; where new, safer devices might be
needed; and
where employee training might be necessary.
Physicians have
some concerns about how the bill might be implemented if it
becomes law.
For example, it
is important that physicians and other health care workers be
allowed to
choose between the old versions of devices and the new, safer
ones, Dr.
Hughes said. In some cases, the older device might be better for
the patient, he
added.
Dr. Hughes gave
the example of when a physician must administer a difficult,
emergency IV.
The old, familiar equipment might be easier and quicker to
use than new,
safer technology, he said.
Physicians and
safety experts also note that the legislation alone will not
eliminate
needlesticks.
"Safe needles
are an improvement, but they don't make up for [inadequate]
training or bad
technique," said J. Chris Hawk III, MD, a member of the
AMA Council on
Scientific Affairs.
Many physicians
believe that devices that enhance health care worker safety
interfere with
patient care, Dr. Fisher said -- a view that stems from a lack of
training.
Some physicians
and safety experts worry that more education needs to be
done to bring
physicians up to speed on safety technology, existing OSHA
rules and the
new requirements the bill would create.
Dr. Fisher
argues that self-retracting devices that make injections and blood
withdrawal
safer already exist and can be used effectively and without much
added cost in
physician offices. But many physicians aren't familiar with the
technology, she
said.
Medical
societies and the federal government have not done enough to
inform
physicians of federal requirements, Dr. Hawk said. "Doctors don't
read the
Federal Register," he added.
Physicians in
small practices are likely to view the new rules as "an additional
burden," said
Bruce Bagley, MD, chair of the American Academy of Family
Physicians.
However, he added, "if it's truly an improvement, then most
physicians
would want to do it."
Back to top.
Workers at risk
Hundreds of
thousands of health care workers are exposed to patients'
blood or body
fluids each year, putting them at risk for contracting HIV and
hepatitis. Most
exposures in hospitals result from punctures by needles or
other sharp
objects:
Needle or
sharp object 83%
Mucous
membrane 13%
Skin 3%
Bite 1%
Chances of
injury are high
Only nurses are
more likely than physicians to be exposed to patients' blood
or body fluids
in hospitals. Of those exposed:
Nurses 44%
Physicians 30%
Technicians 13%
Housekeeping/maintenance 3%
Students 3%
Clerical/administrative staff 1%
Researchers 1%
Dental 1%
Others 4%
Source:
National Surveillance System for Hospital and Health Care
Workers
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