Title:HazMat for Healthcare: An Awareness Level Course
Description:
Who needs to take the Awareness level course? ... Can cause olfactory fatigue. ... use of force against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a government, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
Title: HazMat for Healthcare: An Awareness Level Course
1 HazMat for HealthcareAn Awareness Level Course
Module I
2 Who needs to take the Awareness level course
EMS personnel who are likely to witness or discover a hazardous substance release and who have been trained to initiate an emergency response sequence by notifying the proper authorities of the release.
3 Who needs to take the Operations Level Course
EMS personnel who respond to a HazMat release as part of the initial response in a defensive action and contains the release from a safe distance.
4 Regulations
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (or its state equivalent) has a mandate to ensure that employers provide a safe and healthful workplace.
The primary standard applicable to this program is called Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response (HAZWOPER).
5 Regulations (cont.)
Training categories in the Emergency Response section of the HAZWOPER Standard are
First Responder-Awareness
First Responder-Operations
Hazardous Materials Technician/Specialist
Hazardous Materials Incident Commander
Hazardous Materials Skilled Support Personnel
Defensive 6 Haz Mat for Healthcare at the Awareness Level
Objectives
What are
Hazardous Material Incidents
The risks and problems that can occur
7 AwarenessObjectives continued
How can we
Recognize an incident
Identify characteristics of a chemical
Respond safely and effectively
Make proper notifications
Isolate the scene and deny entry
Conduct Directed Self-Decon
8 CMT Policy and Procedure for Hazardous Materials Incidents
Policy
1. CMT will participate when available in local Hazardous Materials Incident Plans
2. AT NO TIME ARE FILED PERSONNEL AUTHORIZED OR EXPECTED TO PLACE THEMSELVES IN DANGER!
9 Policy continued
3. If a potential hazardous material incident is identified prior to arriving on scene
A. Advise CMTs dispatch center to contact the appropriate County Fire Control or 911 dispatch center for dispatch of the nearest Fire Department and the HAZMAT team.
B. Post at a sufficient distance away from the scenepreferably upwind as to avoid contamination.
C. Follow the direction of the HAZMAT team or Fire Department upon their arrival.
10 Policy continued
4. If a potentially hazardous material incident is not identified prior to entry of the scene
A. DO NOT HANDLE OR DISTURB ANY SUBSTANCE OR MATERIAL!
B. Exit from the scene
C. If you have been contaminated be aware not to cross contaminate any clean areas.
D.Advise CMT dispatch to contact appropriate County Fire Control and dispatch nearest Fire Department and HAZMAT team.
E. Follow the direction of the fire department and the HAZMAT team upon their arrival
11 Awareness Objectives continued
Implementing the Hazmat Response Process
-Awareness Level
12 Definition of a Hazardous Material
There is no one definition.
OSHA definition Hazardous Chemical Any substance to which exposure results or may result in adverse affects on the health or safety of employees or any chemical which is a physical hazard or a health hazard. 29 CFR 1910.1200 (c)
13 What does the regulation state
Hazardous substance means any substance designated or listed under (A) through (D) of this definition exposure to which results or may result in adverse effects on the health or safety of employees
A Any substance defined under section 101(14) of CERCLA
B Any biologic agent and other disease causing agent which after release into the environment and upon exposure ingestion inhalation or assimilation into any person either directly from the environment or indirectly by ingestion through food chains will or may reasonably be anticipated to cause death disease behavioral abnormalities cancer genetic mutation physiological malfunctions (including malfunctions in reproduction) or physical deformations in such persons or their offspring.
C Any substance listed by the U.S. Department of Transportation as hazardous materials under 49 CFR 172.101 and appendices and
D Hazardous waste as herein defined.
14 Examples of Hazardous Materials(OSHA Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response Standard 29 CFR 1910.120 Title 8 5192 CCR)
Chemicals that cause cancer
Biohazards or infectious materials
Chemicals that can burn the skin or eyes on contact
Radioactive materials
15 Examples of Hazardous Materials(Continued)
Chemicals that can catch fire or explode
Chemicals that can cause violent chemical reactions
Poisons
Unknown chemicals
16 Hazardous Materialsin Hospitals
Internal incidents where the spill originates onsite and is limited to the facility and
External incidents that occur offsite and are brought to the hospital (either through a plume of hazardous material or by contaminated patients accessing the facility for treatment.)
17 What are the impacts of Hazardous Materials incidents on
To YOU
To YOUR COMMUNITY
To the HOSPITAL
To the EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT
18
Exercise
19 Nomenclature and Accuracy SIN
TLAs - three letter acronyms
Glossary
WMD PPE OSHA 20 Hazard Classes and things that act like them 21 Emergency Response Guidebook
Identify potential hazards by using the emergency response guidebook from a safe distance away.
22 Explosives (Class 1)
External
Commercial explosives
Fireworks
Ammunition
Fertilizer bombs (Ammonium nitrate fuel oil)
Hydrazine (A flammable liquid. Forms explosive mixtures hypergolic - a high energy rocket fuel corrosive and poisonous)
Internal
Powder Actuated Cartridges
23 Compressed Gases (Class 2)
Internal
Acetylene
Propane
Oxygen
Nitrogen
Nitrous Oxide
Carbon Dioxide
Anesthetic Gases
Medical Air
Argon
External
Hydrogen Sulfide
Phosgene
Methyl Bromide
Ammonia
24 Flammable/Combustible Liquids (Class 3)
Internal
Diesel
Alcohols
Xylene
Methyl Methacrylate
Methyl Ethyl Ketone
External
Gasoline
Hydrazine
Methanol
Diesel
Acetone
25 Flammable Solids (Class 4)
Internal
Barium
External
Aluminum phosphide
Naphthalene
Sodium
Carbon
26 Oxidizers Organic Peroxides (Class 5)
External
Red Fuming Nitric Acid (a corrosive)
Nitrogen Tetroxide
Ammonium Nitrate
Methyl Ethyl Ketone Peroxide
Fluorine Chlorine (also poison compressed gas corrosive)
Internal
Oxygen (actually a compressed gas or cryogenic liquid)
For example lets look at a class of chemicals-the Aldehyde sisters-
Form and
Glut
Thanks to Kaiser Permanente Western Environmental Health Safety Service Hub for permission to modify their aldehyde presentation. 33 Healthcare Uses of Formaldehyde
Tissue Fixation and Preservation
Dialysis equipment disinfection
Stool specimen preservation
Reticulum staining
Biological Safety Cabinet decontamination
Pharmacy compounding
Pathology / Morgue
Operating Room
Labor and Delivery
Hemodialysis
Emergency Room
Waste Storage
Shipping Receiving
Formaldehyde Use Areas 34 Formaldehyde Potential Adverse Health Effects
Inhalation Direct irritant at 1.0 ppm. Sneezing coughing sore throat. Chronic exposures may cause asthma and increase risk of pneumonia and bronchitis. Can cause olfactory fatigue.
Eye Contact Transient discomfort to severe corneal clouding/loss of vision.
Ingestion Burning of mouth pharynx stomach. 37 causes severe irritation inflammation and even death.
35 Formaldehyde Health Effect Levels 36 Healthcare Glutaraldehyde Uses
Cold sterilizing and disinfecting solution
As a component of X-ray film processing chemicals
Histology Pathology Fixative ingredient
Gastroenterology (GI)
Operating Room or Ambulatory Surgery
Respiratory Therapy
Urology
Sterile Processing
Obstetrics/Gynecology
Ultrasound/Radiology
Histology/Pathology
Glutaraldehyde Use Areas 37 Glutaraldehyde Health Effects -
Eyes Clear dose-response relationship for conjuctival and corneal injury. Lowest concentration producing minor corneal injury is 1 0.2 for conjunctival irritation.
Skin Function of site on body time of contact concentration and condition of skin. Threshold concentrations for primary dermal irritation under occlusive conditions on sensitive skin is about 0.4 solution. However concentrations of up to 5 may not induce an irritant effect when applied briefly to bare skin.
Respiratory The threshold for peripheral sensory irritation of the respiratory tract is 0.3 ppm. Short-term repeated exposure to Glutaraldehyde vapors in concentrations from 0.2 to 3.0 ppm shows a steep dose-response for toxicity and moderately severe irritation effects.
38 Summary of Health Hazards
In spill situations both formaldehyde and glutaraldehyde have the potential to pose a significant threat to the respiratory system skin or eyes.
Proper selection of respiratory protection and protective clothing is key to mitigating risk to personnel during spill clean up. (Covered in FRO.)
39 Definition of Spill Types
Incidental Spill - Spill that can be cleaned up in first 10-15 minutes without risk of overexposure (above Cal/OSHA short-term or Ceiling Limits) to employees under normal conditions. (May be FRA.)
Emergency Response Spill - Requires Haz Mat Response if risk of overexposure to employees. (Tech)
40 Key Factors In Response
Any one of these factors can affect the type of response
Time - Vapor levels rise above regulatory levels before response occurs
Volume of Spill - Surface area
Concentration
Ventilation - Type and location
Spill Control Product - Some work better than others
Neutralizers react with the aldehyde and convert it to a non-hazardous product.
Inert Absorbents capture the aldehyde but it still possesses its hazardous qualities.
42 General Spill Clean-up Options
Implement permanent engineering controls that will reduce exposure risk - could be floor exhaust increased over-all exhaust emergency exhaust fan.
Departmental staff to apply spill control product (if available and trained) and work fast to minimize exposure. (FRA)
Clean up if an Incidental Spill and have been trained.
Isolate and deny entry until qualified personnel arrive to evaluate/clean up. (FRA)
Internal or external spill clean-up team (Tech)
43 External Events
We mentioned every day external events that can occur.
So now
Lets talk about terrorism
44 What is terrorism
The unlawful use of force against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a government the civilian population or any segment there of in the furtherance of political or social objectives.
45 Types of Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
B - Biological
N - Nuclear
I - Incendiary
C - Chemical
E - Explosive
46 Terrorism is a menace with malice. A chemical terrorism event (the NC of B-NICE) is a Hazardous Materials Incident. A biological terrorism event (the B of B-NICE) is an Infectious Disease Outbreak. A fire or explosion terrorism event (the IE of B-NICE) is a Burn and/or Mass Casualty-Trauma Incident. 47 Biologic Terrorism Is an Infectious Disease Event
Types of Agents
Bacteria
Anthrax Plague Tularemia
Viruses
Smallpox Hemorrhagic Fevers (Ebola)
Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE)
Toxins
Botulism Ricin
48 Chemical Terrorism Is a Haz Mat Event
Types of Agents
Nerve - Sarin VX
Blister (vesicants) - Mustard Lewisite
Blood - Cyanide
Choking - Chlorine Phosgene
Irritating - Tear Gas Pepper Spray
49 Potential Probability vs. Impact NUCLEAR WEAPON BIOLOGICAL AGENT IMPROVISED NUCLEAR DEVICE CHEMICAL AGENT OR TOXIC INDUSTRIAL CHEMICAL POTENTIAL IMPACT RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL PROBABILITY/LIKELIHOOD 50 Hazardous Materials Recognition Safety
Recognition leads to safety
Safety leads to lives preserved
51 Not Always Reported as Hazmats
Internal
Spilled liquids
External
Traffic accident
Medical aid
Fire person down etc.
Initial report may not indicate presence of hazardous materials! 52 Haz Mat Recognition Clues Markings and Colors Placards and Labels 53 Haz Mat Recognition Clues Material Safety Data Sheets
Should be available for each Haz Mat in the workplace
Required by OSHA Hazard Communication regulations
Provides valuable information
54 Scene Clues
People running from area
People collapsed in the area
Evidence of a leak
Fire
Vapors
Unusual colors/ odors
Loud roar or increased pitch of a valve
55 Senses
Last resort!
Highest danger!
56 Clues are Clues!
They are a
Warning
Note of caution
Indication of things to come
But not always all the answers!
57 Watch Closely 58 Triage CluesEMS
Liquids or powders on the patient
Odors
What were they doing when this happened
Where were they
How long ago did the accident occur
Need to recognize and act fast 59 Information Resources
Container Labels
MSDSs
Poison Control
ERG
ATSDR
Computer programs
People
Do not rely on only one source of information. Be skeptical!! 60 Definition - SIN
S Safety
I Isolation
N Notifications
Internal Spills
and
Contaminated
Patients
61 SAFETY (First last and always)
Dont be a Dead Hero!
Get the big picture.
Can you handle it
What are the risks
What do you know
What dont you know
62 ISOLATE
Isolate the scene and deny entry.
(If someone has something on them dont let them go away. If others havent been exposed dont let them have contact with the chemicals.)
Dont let yourself become contaminated!
63 Perimeters Control Zones
Purpose of Perimeters Control Zones
Ensure safety and isolation
Control the scene
Limit spread of contamination
Allow for safe working area
64 Control Zones
Exclusion / Hot / Red Zone
Contamination Reduction / Warm / Yellow Zone
Support / Cold / Green Zone . This is where CMT employees should be ONLY!
65 Control Zones Contamination Reduction Zone Exclusion Zone Support Zone 66 NOTIFY
Call Dispatch and notify them of a potential HAZMAT situation
DISPATCH WILL THEN CALL
Supervisor
Haz Mat Coordinator
Local Fire agency
67 Directed Self Decontamination
What are your first concerns
Is this patient contaminated with a hazardous material
How can contamination be minimized
How can the patient be managed so that he can receive medical care
68 Directed Self Decontamination (continued)
What are your first actions
S
Do not touch the patient or allow anyone else to have patient contact.
I
Get them out to a predesignated location!!!!
N
Activate your Companies protocol for a hazardous material incident.
69 How soap (surfactants)works.
Soap molecules are composed of a head (that likes water hydrophilic) and a tail (that likes oils hydrophobic/oleophilic)
Soap
breaks the surface tension of the water and make the waterwetter.
also attracts the water soluble and oil soluble contaminants and sends them away.
70 Trash Bag Decon
intended to allow for
placing potentially contaminated clothing in double clear plastic bags
placing valuables in a separate sealable clear plastic bag
tracking of patients
clothing a decontaminated patient
71 COMPLETION FORM
Click here for second half
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