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Terms: Personal safety for nurses 1 - 1 of 19 Bibliographic entries
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 1 Occupational blood exposure among unlicensed home care workers and home care registered nurses: are they protected?
Authors Lipscomb-J; Sokas-R; McPhaul-K; Scharf-B; Barker-P; Trinkoff-A; Storr-C 
Source Am J Ind Med 2009 Jul; 52(7):563-570 
Link http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajim.20701 
NIOSHTIC No. 20035992 
AbstractBACKGROUND: Little is known about the risk of blood exposure among personnel providing care to individual patients residing at home. The objective of this study was to document and compare blood exposure risks among unlicensed home care personal care assistants (PCAs) and home care registered nurses (RNs). METHODS: PCAs self-completed surveys regarding blood and body fluid (BBF) contact in group settings (n = 980), while RNs completed mailed surveys (n = 794). RESULTS: PCAs experience BBF contact in the course of providing care for home-based clients at a rate approximately 1/3 the rate experienced by RNs providing home care (8.1 and 26.7 per 100 full time equivalent (FTE), respectively), and the majority of PCA contact episodes did not involve direct sharps handling. However, for PCAs who performed work activities such as handling sharps and changing wound dressings, activities much more frequently performed by RNs, PCAs were at increased risk of injury when compared with RNs (OR = 7.4 vs. 1.4) and (OR = 6.3 vs. 2.5), respectively. CONCLUSION: Both PCAs and RNs reported exposures to sharps, blood, and body fluids in the home setting at rates that warrant additional training, prevention, and protection. PCAs appear to be at increased risk of injury when performing nursing-related activities for which they are inexperienced and/or lack training. Further efforts are needed to protect home care workers from blood exposure, namely by assuring coverage and enforcement of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) Bloodborne Pathogen Standard [Occupational Safety and Health Administration. 1993. Frequently Asked Questions Concerning the Bloodborne Pathogens Standard. 
KeywordsBloodborne-pathogens; Health-care-facilities; Health-care-personnel; Health-hazards; Injuries; Injury-prevention; Medical-care; Medical-personnel; Medical-services; Needlestick-injuries; Nurses; Occupational-diseases; Occupational-exposure; Occupational-hazards; Occupational-health; Pathogenesis; Pathogenicity; Pathogens; Risk-analysis; Safety-education; Safety-measures; Safety-practices; Safety-research; Work-environment; Worker-health; Work-performance; Workplace-monitoring; Workplace-studies; Work-practices; Author Keywords: home care; blood and body fluid contact; needlesticks; occupational health and safety; prevention 
ContactJ. Lipscomb, Work and Health Research Center, School of Nursing, University of Maryland, 655 West Lombard Street, Room 655c, Baltimore, MD 21210 
CODENAJIMD8 
Publication Date20090701 
Document TypeJournal Article 
Email Addresslipscomb@son.umaryland.edu 
Funding TypeGrant 
Fiscal Year2009 
NTIS Accession No. 
NTIS Price 
Identifying No.Grant-Number-R01-OH-008237 
Issue of Publication
ISSN0271-3586 
Source NameAmerican Journal of Industrial Medicine 
StateMD 
Performing OrganizationUniversity of Maryland, Baltimore 
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