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Health Care Worker Safety
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The SafeHandS network is concerned with health care worker safety in relation to blood borne viruses. Clearly there are many other aspects of maintaining a safe workplace but they require different strategies and are dealt with in other forums. The main principles of health care worker safety in relation to blood borne viruses are:
Conducting venepuncture using Standard Precautions (i.e. use of gloves) Health care worker safety in relation to blood borne viruses is integral to but is not the same as Infection Control. The traditional primary goal of Infection Control practices is to prevent infection spreading in health care environments, which includes but is not limited to the prevention of infection of health care staff. Although relatively few cases of occupational transmission of blood borne viruses have been recorded in the Asia Pacific Region, health care worker safety is a significant issue. Why Focus on Health Care Worker Safety?
Cleaning instruments before sterilisation
Training WHO field staff in Beijing on the correct use of masks for SARS Staff retention is important because health care workers are expensive to train. Low Cost Interventions to Improve Health Care Worker Safety"I have seen examples of improvement in health care worker safety strategies throughout the Asia Pacific region. Some of these have been driven by national policy, but local hospital staff who have identified their own problems and issues have initiated others. One particular example was in a hospital in northwest China that had a problem with needle stick injuries due to a lack of appropriate sharps disposal units. The hospital could not afford specially designed containers so they re-used the hard cardboard boxes in which their disposable syringes were supplied. They sealed the boxes with sticky tape, printed out yellow paper labels with disposal instructions and biohazard symbols, cut a hole in the top (large enough for a needle and syringe) and then located them in places near where the needles were used and where the boxes would not get wet. This hospital has subsequently decreased the number of needle stick injuries. The cost of producing these boxes is about 15 US cents." Peta-Anne Zimmerman, Infection Control Technical Advisor. Principles and Interventions to Improve Health Care Worker SafetyReduce susceptibility to infection:
Prevent occupational exposures:
Manage occupational exposures:
Maintain the health of infected health care workers:
Practices which are NOT Recommended to Prevent Transmission
Source: Gold, J., Tomkins, M., Melling, P., Bates, N. May 2004, Guidance Note on Health Care Worker Safety from HIV and other Blood Borne Infections, The World Bank.
Putting on personal protective equipment for a sterile procedure;
Appropriate disconnection of intravenous tubing and disposal of sharps Using single-handed re-capping technique Photos courtesy of Chiang Mai University Hospital and Mahosot Hospital Lao PDR. |


















