Title: BLOODBORNE PATHOGENS TRAINING
1OSHA / WISHA BLOODBORNE PATHOGENS TRAININGby
Lanette Dyer
2Overview
- Review of BBP
- Exposure Control Plan
- Hepatitis B Vaccination
- Control Measures
- Personal Protective Equipment
- Waste Management
- Post Exposure Management
3BLS Sick
- Called for a 48 year old alcoholic fallen off a
stool - C/C rib pain from fall
- Pt coughing
- Denies LOC, neck/back/abd pain, dizziness, nausea
- Recently had flu
Get Lost, I didnt call you
4BLS Sick
- On exam,
- Slurring words, coughing
- VS HR 98, BP 142/P, RR 24
- Lungs scattered rhonci
- Tender to R ant chest
Beat It, I didnt call you
5BLS Sick
- Whats wrong with this Barney?
6TB Numbers
- 2 billion infected worldwide
- 250 new cases in WA last year
- 5 in Thurston Co
- 18 in Pierce
- Risk factors
- HIV/IVDA
- Homeless
- Prisoners (including nursing homes, dorm slugs)
- Immigrant (S. Central America, Africa, SE Asia)
7TB Testing
- TB Testing shall be
- Â Â Â Made available free of charge to members
- Offered at a reasonable time and place
- Â Â Â Â Â Performed under the supervision of
someone smart - Administered according to the standard
recommendations for medical practice current at
the time of testing - a) The department shall not make TB testing
mandatory. - Â
- b) The department shall ensure that members who
decline to accept TB testing sign a denial form. - Â
8TB protection
- Patient gets a particulate mask (unless needing
real O2!) - If possible move the patient outside to fresh
air. - Respirators shall be donned by all members of the
Emergency Medical Team. - Windows opened and exhausted fans shall be
operating. - Nebulizers should be pointed downward and away
from personnel. - Coach the patient to cover mouth/nose with
his/her hand or tissue during coughing episodes.
9TB Masks
10Malaria or West Nile?
USA Malaria About 1,000 cases are reported
annually   Worldwide prevalence of MalariaEach
year, 300 to 500 million people develop malaria
and 1.5 to 3 millionmostly childrendie,
according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
11Malaria or West Nile?
2004 West Nile Virus Activity in the United
States(reported to CDC as of October 12, 2004)
12OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE
- Reasonably anticipated skin, eye, mucous
membrane, or puncture wound (parenteral) contact
with blood or OPIM (Other Potentially Infectious
Materials) that may result from the performance
of employee duties.
13BLOODBORNE PATHOGENS
- Pathogenic microorganisms that are present in
human blood or OPIM and can cause disease in
humans. - Examples include HBV, HCV, HIV
14Other Potentially Infectious Materials (OPIM)
- Human body fluids
- Semen, vaginal secretions (not at work!)
- CSF, amniotic
- any body fluid visibly contaminated with blood
15NOT Infectious
- Feces, snot, saliva, sputum, sweat, tears,
vomitus, and urine - Unless blood-stained
16HBV, HCV and HIV
- Bloodborne viruses
- Can produce chronic infection
- Transmissible in health-care settings
- Data from multiple sources (e.g., surveillance,
observational studies, serosurveys) used to
assess risk of occupational transmission
17BBP TRANSMISSIONOverview
- Sexual contact
- Sharing needles or syringes
- From infected mother to baby
- Blood transfusion
- Organ transplant
- Not transmitted through casual contact
18Average Risk of Transmission after Percutaneous
Injury
Risk ()
Source
0.3 1.8 30.0
HIV Hepatitis C Hepatitis B
19Viral Hepatitis
- About 50,000 reported cases per year
- 60 hepatitis A
- 25 hepatitis B
- 15 hepatitis C
- lt1 unspecifiednot enough to count
- CDC estimates 500-750,000 actual new cases
- 15,000 deaths per year
- 4,000,000 carriers
20 Viral HepatitisOverview
TYPES OF HEPATITIS
A
B
D
C
E
Source of
feces
blood/
blood/
blood/
feces
virus
blood-derived
blood-derived
blood-derived
body fluids
body fluids
body fluids
Route of
fecal-oral Fast food
Percutaneous,
Percutaneous,
Percutaneous,
fecal-oral
transmission
mucosal
mucosal
mucosal
Chronic
no
yes
yes
yes
no
infection
Prevention
pre/post-
pre/post-
blood donor
pre/post-
ensure safe
exposure
exposure
screening
exposure
drinking
immunization
immunization
risk behavior
immunization
water
modification
risk behavior
modification
21HBV TRANSMISSION
- Occurs when blood or body fluids from an infected
person enters the body of a person who is not
immune. - HBV is spread through
- sexual contact with an infected person,
- sharing needles/syringes,
- needle sticks or sharps exposures on the job, or
- from an infected mother to her baby during birth.
22HBV SYMPTOMS
- jaundice
- fatigue
- abdominal pain
- loss of appetite
- nausea, vomiting
- joint pain
- About 30 of persons have no signs or symptoms.
- Signs and symptoms are less common in children
than adults.
23HCV TRANSMISSION
- HCV is spread through
- Unsafe sexual practices
- sharing needles/syringes,
- needlesticks or sharps exposures on the job, or
- from an infected mother to her baby during birth.
24HCV TRENDS/STATISTICS
- Number of new infections per year has declined
from an average of 240,000 in the 1980s to about
25,000 in 2001. - Most infections are due to illegal injection drug
use. - Transfusion-associated cases occurred prior to
blood donor screening now occurs in less than
one per million transfused unit of blood. - Estimated 3.9 million (1.8) Americans have been
infected with HCV, of whom 2.7 million are
chronically infected.
http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/hepatitis/c/fac
t.htm
25HCV SYMPTOMS
- 80 of persons have no signs or symptoms.
- jaundice
- fatigue
- dark urine
- abdominal pain
- Long hair
- Bad acting
26The Fire Service Controversy
27The Fire Service Controversy
28HIV STATISTICS
- United States
- Through December 2001, a total of 816,149 cases
of AIDS had been reported to the CDC. - 57 proven cases amongst Health Care workers
- Another 138 maybe
- Worldwide 65 million people since beginning.
- At the end of 2002, an estimated 42 million
people were living with HIV infection or AIDS.
29HIV TRANSMISSION
- HIV is spread by
- sexual contact with an infected person,
- sharing needles/syringes,
- Needle sticks or sharps exposures on the job.
- Less commonly (and now very rarely in countries
where blood is screened for HIV antibodies),
through transfusions of infected blood or blood
clotting factors. - Babies born to HIV-infected women may become
infected before or during birth or through
breast-feeding after birth.
30HIV SYMPTOMS
- Many people do not have any symptoms when they
first become infected with HIV. Some people,
however, have a flu-like illness within a month
or two after exposure to the virus. - These symptoms usually disappear within a week to
a month and are often mistaken for those of
another viral infection. During this period,
people are very infectious, and HIV is present in
large quantities in genital fluids.
31HIV/AIDS SYMPTOMS
- Varying symptoms
- No symptoms to flu-like symptoms
- Fever, lymph node swelling, rash, fatigue,
diarrhea, joint pain - Many people who are infected with HIV do not have
any symptoms at all for many years. - Will develop AIDS
- Weight loss, night sweats, diarrhea, loss of
appetite, rash, lymph node swelling - Lack of resistance to disease
32MRSA
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus
- 20-30 Healthcare workers nostrils
- Lots of nosocomial spread
- Normally found in bed-ridden long term care
patients - Main transmission via direct contact
- So wash hands, wear gloves
- If needed, gown/mask
33Preventing Transmission of Bloodborne Viruses in
Health-Care Settings
- Promote hepatitis B vaccination
- Treat all blood as potentially infectious
- Use barriers to prevent blood contact
- Prevent percutaneous injuries
- Safely dispose of sharps and blood-contaminated
materials
34EXPOSURE CONTROL PLAN
- Written Document
- Accessible to all personnel
- Update at least annually
- Or when alterations in procedures create new
occupational hazards
35EXPOSURE CONTROL PLAN
- KEY ELEMENTS
- Identification of job classifications/tasks where
there is exposure to blood/OPIM. - Schedule of how/when provisions of standard will
be implemented. - Methods of communicating hazards to staff.
- Need for Hepatitis B vaccination.
- Post exposure evaluation and follow-up.
36EXPOSURE CONTROL PLAN
- KEY ELEMENTS
- Recordkeeping/compliance methods
- Engineering/work practice controls
- Personal protective equipment (PPE)
- Housekeeping
- Procedures for postexposure evaluation and
follow-up
37TRAINING
- Initial training
- Provided at time of initial assignment to tasks
with occupational exposure or when job tasks
change. - Annual refresher training
- Employer has record keeping responsibility
38PROGRAM
- Communicate hazards
- Identify/control hazards
- Preventive measures
- Hepatitis B vaccine
- Engineering controls
- Safe work practices
- PPE
- Housekeeping
39HEPATITIS B VACCINATION
- Effective in preventing hepatitis B
- 95 develop immunity
- 3-dose vaccination series
- Test for antibodies to HBsAg 1 to 2 months after
3-dose vaccination series completed. - Re-vaccinate those who do not develop adequate
antibody response.
40HEPATITIS B VACCINATION
- Safe, effective, and long-lasting
- Booster doses of vaccine and periodic serologic
testing to monitor antibody concentrations after
completion of the vaccine series are not
necessary for vaccine responders.
41CONTROL MEASURES
- Engineering and work practice controls
- Needle less systems
- Sharps containers/shuttles
- PPE required when occupational exposure to BBP
remains after instituting these controls.
42EXPOSURE CONTROL PLAN Summary
- Employers must implement safer medical devices
- Appropriate, commercially available, and
effective - Appropriate
- Based on reasonable judgment in individual cases,
will not jeopardize patient/employee safety or be
medically compromised - Effective
- Based on reasonable judgment, will reduce the
likelihood of an exposure incident involving a
contaminated sharp
43PPE
You got what!?
44PPE
- Gloves
- Surgical mask
- Long-sleeved protective apparel (e.g., bunker)
- Protective eyewear with solid side shields
- Chin-length face shield worn with a surgical mask
45GLOVES
- Per SOPs wear gloves on all pt contacts.
- Remove gloves after caring
- for a patient.
- Do not wear the same pair of gloves for the care
of more than one patient. - Removal grasp at wrist and strip off
inside-out.
46EYEWEAR/FACE SHIELD
- Wear when splash, spray, or spatter is
anticipated. - Eyewear must have solid side shields.
- Remove by headband or side arms.
- Do not touch shield or lens area.
- May be decontaminated and reused.
- A chin-length face shield may be worn with a mask
if additional protection is desired.
47PROTECTIVE APPAREL
- Long sleeves required by OSHA if worn as PPE.
- Wear when splash, spray, or spatter is
anticipated. - Remove immediately if penetrated by blood/OPIM.
- Use tie strings to remove and peel off.
- Minimize contact during removal.
- If reusable, place in marked laundry container.
48PPE
- Employer responsibility
- Will provide, maintain, and replace
- Ensure accessibility in appropriate sizes
- Provide alternative products (e.g., latex-free
gloves, powderless gloves, glove liners) - Will ensure employee use
- Launder or discard if appropriate
49HOUSEKEEPING
- Employer must ensure clean/sanitary workplace.
- Work surfaces, equipment, and other reusable
items must be decontaminated upon completion of
procedure when contaminated with blood/OPIM. - Barriers protecting surfaces/equipment must be
replaced when contaminated or at end of the work
shift.
50Postexposure ManagementWound Care
- Clean wounds with soap and water.
- Flush mucous membranes with water.
- No evidence of benefit for
- application of antiseptics or disinfectants.
- squeezing (milking) puncture sites.
- Avoid use of bleach and other agents caustic to
skin.
51Postexposure ManagementNotification
- Report Immediately
- Exposed individual must be directed to a
qualified health-care professional. - Antiretroviral drugs (if indicated) should be
administered immediately!
52Postexposure ManagementThe Exposure Report
- Date and time of exposure
- Procedure detailswhat, where, how, with what
device - Exposure details...route, body substance
involved, volume/duration of contact - Information about source person
- Information about the exposed person
- Exposure management details
53Postexposure Management Assessment of Infection
Risk
- Source evaluation
- Presence of HBsAg
- Presence of HCV antibody
- Presence of HIV antibody
- If source unknown, assess epidemiologic evidence
- Type of exposure
- Percutaneous
- Mucous membrane
- Non-intact skin
- Bites resulting in blood exposure
- Body substance
- Blood
- Bloody fluid
- Potentially infectious fluid or tissue
54Postexposure Management Unknown or Untestable
Source
- Consider information about exposure
- Where and under what circumstances
- Prevalence of HBV, HCV, or HIV in the population
group - Testing of needles and other sharp instruments
not recommended - Unknown reliability and interpretation of
findings - Hazard of handling sharp
55Postexposure Management Evaluating the Source
- If the HBV, HCV, and/or HIV status of the source
is unknown, testing should be done. - Testing should be performed as soon as possible.
- Consult your laboratory regarding most
appropriate test to expedite obtaining results. - Informed consent should be obtained in accordance
with state and local laws.
56How to live long?
57The Healthy Way