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Preventing Injuries to Nurses in Home Care Settings

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Title: Preventing Injuries to Nurses in Home Care Settings


1
Preventing Injuries to Nurses in Home Care
Settings
  • Stephanie Chalupka, EdD, APRN, BC, FAAOHN,
    Margaret Quinn, ScD, Pia Markkanen, ScD,
    Catherine Galligan, MSc, Letitia Davis, ScD,
    Angela Laramie, MPH,
    Natalia Firsova, MA

June 7, 2007
University of Massachusetts Lowell
2
OH S Hazards in Home Health Care
  • Job Stress
  • Variety of environments/Conditions
  • Limited supplies/Equip
  • Isolation
  • Musculoskeletal (all same as HCPs)
  • Working alone/No mech. lifting/transfer devices
  • Awkward posture/beds not adjustable
  • Latex
  • Needlestick Other Sharp Injuries
  • Violence
  • Mugging
  • Animals
  • Weather
  • Icy roads sidewalks
  • Unsafe Home
  • Stairs
  • Communicable Disease Transmission
  • TB
  • Auto Injuries

3
Home Health Care Nursing Risk Factors for Blood
Exposures and Sharps Injuries
Project SHARRP
  • Margaret Quinn, ScD, Stephanie Chalupka, EdD,
    APRN, BC, FAAOHN, Pia Markkanen, ScD, Catherine
    Galligan, MSc, Angela Laramie, MPH, Letitia
    Davis, ScD, Natalia Firsova, MA


4
Acknowledgements
Project SHARRP
  • Project SHARRP (Safe Homecare and Risk Reduction
    for Providers) Research Team
  • School of Health and Environment, UMASS Lowell
  • Massachusetts Department of Public
    HealthOccupational Health Surveillance Unit
  • U.S. NIOSH
  • SHARRP research partners
  • VNA Care Network
  • UMass Memorial Home Health Hospice
  • Home Health VNA of Lawrence
  • Gardner VNA
  • Greater Medford VNA
  • Boston VNA
  • Home Staff
  • SEIU
  • MNA

5
Home Health Care
Project SHARRP
  • Home as work environment
  • Inadequate surveillance - Needlesticks
    other sharp medical devices (SHARPS) unknown
  • Risk of infection to blood-borne pathogens
  • - HBV, HCV, HIV
  • Size of the US home healthcare industry
  • 2004 6 of overall healthcare workers
  • 56 growth in home health aide occupation
  • in next decade US Bureau of Labor Statistics,
    2006
  • Women and minority workers

6
Major Aims
  • Establish surveillance system
  • Survey home healthcare clinicians
  • Qualitative characterization
  • Focus groups
  • One-on-one interviews
  • - Cross-sectional survey

7
Methods Focus groups In-depth
interviews
Total 17 7 24

Total 10
8
ResultsAdvantages Challenges
  • Flexibility, independence
  • Long-term patient relationship appreciation/grati
    tude of patients patients health progress
    patients family
  • Diversity and challenge of nursing diversity of
    diagnoses, multi-tasked work duties
  • Stress Detailed paperwork
  • Medicare billing, insurance, reimbursements
    often continues at home
  • Long-distance driving
  • time, gas expenses
  • Emotional attachment
  • e.g. patient death

9
some of these...apartments are atrocious. They
are cluttered to the point that there is no place
to put even a cup. Things are boxed, boxes are
piled up, youve seen it. Blankets are piled up.
there isnt a pathway to walk. So theres no
clean surface area to work from
10
Security and safety probably being first and
foremost. The staff are going into environments
that we have no control over and sometimes
they're going into lovely homes and patients that
we really don't have concerns about and in other
circumstances you have patients that are
involved in illegal activity and the housing
situations are located in very questionable
neighborhoods, it might be dark, there might be
no light, there might be people looking either
to rob somebody, mug somebody, there are all
kinds of security issues that crop up
periodically.
11
Results General Work Hazards
  • Hygiene
  • insects
  • dirty environment
  • rodents
  • hot/ poor in-door air quality (smoking)
  • Security and personal safety concerns
  • unsafe neighborhoods
  • violent or unstable patients/ family members
  • isolation
  • animal attacks
  • chaos and clutter
  • poor lighting
  • fire hazards
  • Rapid work pace/ time constraints
  • clinicians feel rushed to complete
    work
  • Lack of work stations
  • Heavy lifting and moving patients
  • Lack of supplies

12
Results Sharps injuries blood exposure
  • Medical conditions/ treatments
  • diabetes, HIV
  • Malfunctioning/ ineffective safety sharp device
  • Clutter/ lack of work space
  • Unexpected bleeding
  • Recapping
  • No glove use/ slippery gloves
  • Sharp supplies in nurse bags
  • Various DME suppliers
  • Sharp disposal
  • lack of containers
  • overfilled containers
  • poor container design
  • leaving sharps around in trash
  • Patient characteristics
  • moving when using the needle
  • violent, confused, or uncooperative behaviors
  • unsafe sharps disposal
  • Wound care
  • dressing change/ disposal

13
Results Reasons for Not Reporting
  • Time-consuming, frightening big deal
  • frightening possibility about a potential
    infection and not wanting to know about it
  • not want to be seen as a careless, bad nurse
  • temporary vs steady employment
  • disease history of a person
  • non-severe stick (scratch not a deep puncture)
  • Health insurance factor
  • personal insurance fees may go up
  • negative consequences toward a new health
    insurance

14
Lessons Learned
  • Safety analysis based on self-blame vs. systems
    approach
  • Social context of home as a workplace
  • home work is invisible
  • gender, race/ ethnicity
  • Focus groups vs in-depth interviews both needed
  • Focus groups clinicians personal experience at
    homes when caring for patients
  • Interviews educative and factual examples of
    incidents,
  • practices, and policies at the workplace or
    in the healthcare community

15
Advice from Participants on Prevention of Blood
Exposures and Sharp Injuries
  • Safety sharp device design easy to use
  • Needleless system designers - collaborate with
    users to improve retractable needle design
  • No splash-backs or pain to patients
  • Device fully tested before market debut ? cost
    for safety devices
  • Consistency among manufacturers and vendors
    standardize sharps devices for improved safety
  • Promote culture of safety

16
Advice From Participants to Improve Exposure
Reporting
  • Use reports as lessons learned from staff safety
    and patient safety perspective
  • Require monitoring of reports for licensing
  • Single reporting form for all workplace injuries
  • Training-Not punitive action when injuries
    reported
  • Pre-event planning for an injury (patient care
    plan, risk category of a patient)
  • Educational intervention for sharp injury/ blood
    exposure reporting is a right thing to do

17
HELP!
  • Expanded regimens and expert advice indicated for
    severe exposures or when resistance is suspected
  • AIDS Education Training Centers (AETCs) Funded
    by HRSA
  • National Clinicians Post-Exposure Prophylaxis
    Hotline (PEPline)
  • (888) HIV-4911

18
CDC Post-Exposure Prophylaxis Guidelines
MMWR 200554(No. RR-9).
19
Safe Work Practices
www.cdc.gov/sharpssafety/index.html
20
Safe Work Practices
Source http//www.sustainablehospitals.org
21
Safer Work Practices Tips for Selecting Safe
Needle Devices
  • Evaluate and select products systematically
  • Keep your eyes open for new products
  • Ask for samples hands-on look is essential
  • If samples look promising
  • do a clinical evaluation in the appropriate dept
  • Eval tool http//www.TDICT.org
  • Note employee evaluation and feedback
  • When you buy a new device, use the manufacturer's
    representative for training staff

22
Safe Work Practices Tips for Selecting Safe
Needle Devices
  • Keep contracts short because products are rapidly
    changing and improving
  • Criterion for selecting a product
  • manufacturer must train throughout all your
    facilities
  • Encourage staff members to question and offer
    constructive criticism to the manufacturer's rep
  • (The representative is a direct link back to the
    design engineers - way products get refined and
    improved)

23
Safe Work Practices Tips for Selecting Safe
Needle Devices
  • Use existing product lists to be informed about
    safe needle devices on the market
  • http//www.dhs.cahwnet.gov/ohb/SHARPS/disclaim.htm
    The California List of
    Needleless Systems and Needles With Engineered
    Sharps Injury Protection
  • http//www.med.Virginia.EDU/medcntr/centers/epinet
    /products. html

    International Health Care Worker Safety center at
    the University of Virginia Health System
  • http//www.sustainablehospitals.org

    Sustainable Hospitals Project-
    information about alternative healthcare products
    and practices

24
Safe Work Practices How to Make an Inventory
List of Sharps Devices for Your Facility
  • The list can serve as a tool to help you
  • ID conventional devices lacking safety features
  • Work with your clinicians to understand why
    conventional devices are still used
  • No viable alternatives?
  • Conventional device without a viable alternative
  • establish next review date to determine
    availability of safer devices
  • Provide a copy of the list to key committees -
    status of safety device use
  • Safety Committee
  • Product Evaluation Committee

25
Safe Work Practices How to Make an Inventory
List of Sharps Devices for Your Agency
  • Why you need one
  • Can be a powerful tool to complement your
  • existing sharps injury prevention plan
  • Our work with hospitals has shown
  • Reorder old-style sharps devices that lack an
    integral sharps injury prevention (safety)
    feature
  • often unintentional
  • Frequently only AFTER needlestick injury realize
    a conventional device was still being used
  • Having too many different kinds of safety
    devices
  • ITSELF a risk factor for injury.

26
List of devices for which a safety alternative is
(or was) not available or
appropriate -Shows use/phase-out status of
conventional devices,
-Provides an effective way of documenting
exceptions to OSHA or state regulations.

-List shorter as
more devices are converted to safety devices,
the list becomes shorter shorter.

e.g.
remove a converted product from the list after
the completion of 2 satisfactory follow-up
user surveys
Source http//www.sustainablehospitals.org/PDF/Sh
arpsList.pdf
27
Comprehensive list that shows all sharps used
throughout a facility Organized as a
spreadsheet-easy to sort the information in
different ways.
Source http//www.sustainablehospi
tals.org/PDF/SharpsList.pdf
28
Summary
  • Fuller characterization of HHC work
  • Invisible yet growing industry
  • Interventions needed
  • Eliminate/ minimize hazards
  • Preserve or enhance positive work aspects
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