Occupational Exposure to Tuberculosis TB - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

Occupational Exposure to Tuberculosis TB

Description:

Minimum of 2 ACH of outdoor air. Monitoring devices. Differential air flow ... If patient has signs & symptoms, have patient wear a surgical or procedure mask ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:248
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: OSHA161
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Occupational Exposure to Tuberculosis TB


1
Occupational Exposure to Tuberculosis (TB)
  • John Furman
  • Division of Occupational Safety Health

2
Purpose of the Presentation
  • Discuss DOSHs current enforcement procedures for
    workplace exposure to tuberculosis (TB).
  • Discuss the new CDC guidelines for preventing
    transmission of TB in healthcare (published
    December 30, 2005)
  • Understand the implications to investigations of
    healthcare facilities

3
DOSH Enforcement
  • No OSHA/DOSH TB control rule
  • WRD 11.35 establishes enforcement of CDC TB
    control guidelines
  • Safe workplace standard
  • Hazard specific requirements
  • OSHA enforcement directive CPL 2.106
  • Currently enforcing 1994 CDC guidelines
  • 2005 guidelines may be implemented without
    penalty

4

Why did CDC revise TB guidelines?
  • 1994 guidelines widely implemented in health-care
    facilities
  • Advisory Council for the Elimination of
    Tuberculosis (ACET) requested revision of 1994
    guidelines based on decrease in TB incidence
    rates
  • New Guidelines for Preventing the Transmission of
    Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Health-Care
    Settings, MMWR Vol. 54/No. RR-17
  • Published December 30, 2005

5
Why does OSHA/DOSH need to remain involved?
  • TB remains a public health concern
  • Infection rates greater than US average in
    certain high risk populations
  • MDR-TB a growing concern
  • HCWs face increased exposure risks
  • 10 HCWs diagnosed with TB disease in 2005
  • Recent cases of HCWs as exposure sources

6
WRD 11.35
  • Enforcement Procedures and Scheduling for
    Occupational Exposure to Tuberculosis, OSHA
    Instruction CPL 2.106, issued 1996
  • References CDCs Guidelines for Preventing the
    Transmission of tuberculosis in Health-Care
    Facilities MMWR Vol. 43/No. RR-13, 1994
  • Provides uniform inspection procedures

7
WRD 11.35, Applicability
  • Scope of workplaces
  • Health Care Facilities
  • Correctional Institutions
  • Long-term Care Facilities for Elderly
  • Homeless Shelters
  • Drug Treatment Centers

8
Incidence of TB
  • 2005 TB rates
  • US average rate was 4.9/100,000
  • Washington rate 4.0/100,000
  • cases TB disease holding steady at 253/yr
  • King (127), Pierce (27), Snohomish (24) with
    most cases
  • 3 cases of MDR-TB reported

9
Risk Factors
  • Foreign born
  • Unemployed
  • Homeless
  • Excess alcohol
  • HIV-AIDS positive
  • Injecting drug use
  • Other drug use
  • Health care worker
  • Previous diagnosis
  • Resident of correctional facility
  • Resident of long-term care facility
  • Migrant worker

10
HCW
  • All paid and unpaid persons working in health
    care settings
  • WISHAct applies only to the employer, employee
    relationship
  • DOH, JCAHO, CMS et al expect that all HCWs are
    included in the TB medical surveillance program

11
2005 GuidelinesSummary of Changes
  • The scope of settings in which the guidelines
    apply has been broadened to include laboratories
    and additional outpatient and nontraditional
    facility based settings.
  • These recommendations generally apply to an
    entire health-care setting rather than areas
    within a setting.
  • The risk assessment process includes the
    assessment of additional aspects of infection
    control

12
Summary of Changes
  • A written TB control plan is required
  • Blood assay for M. tb, QuantiFERONTB Gold, may
    be used instead of TST in TB screening programs
    for HCWs.
  • Criteria for serial screening of HCWs are more
    clearly defined. This may decrease the number of
    HCWs who need serial TB screening.

13
Summary of Changes
  • New terms, airborne infection precautions,
    airborne infection isolation room (AII room),
    tuberculin skin testing (TST), are introduced.
  • Information on ultraviolet germicidal irradiation
    (UVGI) and room-air recirculation units has been
    expanded.
  • AFB specimens may be taken 8-24 hours apart with
    one being an early morning specimen.

14
Summary of Changes
  • Training recommendations have been expanded
  • Competency of those administering and reading
    TSTs
  • Recommendations for annual respirator training,
    initial respirator fit testing, and periodic
    respirator fit testing have been added.
  • The evidence of the need for respirator fit
    testing is summarized.

15
Expanded Scope
  • New Terminology Health-care-associated settings
  • used to broaden the potential places where
    guidelines apply
  • Inpatient settings
  • Patient rooms
  • Emergency depts.
  • Intensive care units
  • Surgical suites
  • Laboratories Lab procedure areas
  • Bronchoscopy suites
  • Sputum induction or inhalation therapy rooms
  • Autopsy suites
  • Embalming rooms

16
Scope (cont.)
  • Outpatient settings
  • TB treatment facilities
  • Medical offices
  • Ambulatory-care settings
  • Dialysis units
  • Dental care settings
  • Non-Traditional facility-based settings
  • Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
  • Long term care settings (hospices skilled
    nursing facilities)
  • Settings in Correctional facilities (prisons,
    jails, detention centers)
  • Home-based healthcare outreach settings
  • Homeless shelters

17
New TB Screening Blood Test
  • D) QFT-G Blood test
  • QuantiFERONTB Gold test (QFT-G) (Cellestis
    Limited, Carnegie, Victoria, Australia)
  • A blood assay for M. tuberculosis (BAMT).
  • Whole-blood interferon gamma release assay (IGRA)
  • Might be used instead of TST in TB screening
    programs for HCWs

18
QFT vs. TST
  • Pros of using QFT-G (BAMT)
  • Cost effective alternative
  • Only 1 visit for blood draw
  • Results can be available in lt24 hours after
    testing
  • Greater specificity for M. tuberculosis with BAMT
  • Antigens used are not present in most NTM or
    used for BCG
  • Can be used to screen persons vaccinated with BCG
  • Not subject to boosting effect
  • Not subject to placement and reading errors
  • Cons of using QFT-G (BAMT)
  • Possible errors in collecting or transporting
    blood specimens
  • Incubation must be done w/in 16 hours of
    collection
  • Lab-based errors in running or interpreting the
    assay
  • Cost prohibitive?

19
Appendix B TB Risk Assessment Worksheet
  • Elements considered in Risk Assessment Process
  • Incidence of TB (community facility)
  • Risk Classification
  • Screening of HCWs for M. TB infection
  • TB Infection-Control Program
  • Implementation of TB infection control plan based
    on review by infection control committee
  • Lab processing of TB related specimens, tests,
    results based on laboratory
  • Environmental controls
  • Respiratory Protection Program
  • Reassessment of TB Risks

20
Risk Classification
Potential ongoing transmission Evidence of ongoi
ng transmission regardless of setting
  • Low
  • lt200 beds
  • lt3 pts/yr
  • gt200 beds
  • lt6 pts/ yr
  • Outpatient, nontraditional facility-based
  • lt3pts/yr
  • Medium
  • lt200 beds
  • gt3 pts/yr
  • gt200 beds
  • gt6 pts/ yr
  • Outpatient, nontraditional facility-based
  • gt3 pts/yr

21
New Screening Frequency Recommendation
  • Risk TB Screening Frequency
  • Classification
  • Low Baseline, further screening

  • is not necessary unless

  • unless exposure
  • Medium Baseline, annual
    screening
  • Potential Baseline, every
    screening
  • ongoing
    every 8-10 weeks
  • transmission

22
Special Notes on Risk Classifications
  • Classification of medium risk might need to be
    assigned, even if a facility meets the low-risk
    criteria when
  • Settings serve communities w/ high incidence of
    TB disease
  • Settings that treat populations at high risk
    (e.g., HIV patients)
  • Settings that treat patients w/ drug-resistant TB
    disease
  • A classification of potential ongoing
    transmission should be applied to a specific
    group of HCWs or to a specific area of the
    health-care setting in which evidence of ongoing
    transmission is apparent, if such a group or area
    can be identified.
  • Conduct investigation (screen workers every 8-10
    wks until corrected)
  • Classification should be temporary
  • The setting should be reclassified as medium risk
    and recommended screening should be annual.

23
Criteria for HCW screening
  • All HCWs who share the air must be included
    in the medical surveillance program.
  • HCWs whose duties do not include contact with
    patients or TB specimens may not need to be
    included in the serial TB screening program
  • In certain settings, this change will decrease
    the number of HCWs who need serial TB screening

24
TST/BAMT Positive HCWs
  • Remote infection
  • Initial and annual symptom screen
  • Additional evaluations as indicated
  • Education re symptoms and duty to report
  • Baseline positive or conversion
  • Symptom screen and CXR
  • Additional evaluations as indicated
  • Consider prophylaxis

25
Airborne Infection Isolation (AII Room)
  • New Terminology AII Room
  • Airborne infection isolation room (AII room) is
    introduced instead of the term negative pressure
    room or AFB Isolation room
  • Another term used
  • Airborne infection precautions - used instead of
    airborne precautions

26
AII Room (cont.)
  • Use of other national consensus guidelines AIA,
    ASHRAE
  • 6 ACH (existing) 12 ACH (new)
  • Minimum of 2 ACH of outdoor air
  • Monitoring devices
  • Differential air flow rates and leakage
  • Pressure differential from 0.001 to 0.01 in water
  • Maintenance schedules

27
Information on UVGI
  • Information on ultraviolet germicidal irradiation
    (UVGI) and room-air recirculation units has been
    expanded.
  • Information on effectiveness of UVGI added
  • Discussion of studies conducted which examine
  • Air mixing
  • Relative humidity
  • Ventilation rates

28
Respiratory Protection
  • Expanded section on respiratory protection
  • Reference to OSHA Respiratory protection standard
    requirement for Respiratory protection program
  • Selection criteria CDC/NIOSH approved
    respirator
  • Medical screening/evaluation of those assigned
    respirators
  • Annual training recommended

29
Respiratory Protection
  • WAC 296-842 applies to all respirator use at
    work.
  • OSHA not enforcing annual fit test requirements
  • DOSH will enforce 296-842 using state funds only

30
(No Transcript)
31
(No Transcript)
32
(No Transcript)
33
(No Transcript)
34
(No Transcript)
35
DOSH Inspection Focus
  • Assignment of responsibility
  • Written TB control plan
  • TB risk assessment
  • Medical surveillance
  • Early detection and isolation
  • Engineering controls
  • Respiratory protection
  • HCW training and education
  • Respiratory etiquette
  • Coordination with local health department

36
Current Enforcement
  • OSHA currently working on update to PCPL 2.106
  • Formally still enforcing 1994 CDC guidelines
  • Consult with DOSH ONC re facilities who have
    implemented 2005 guidelines
  • Enforce DOSH Respirator rule re bio-agents

37
  • QUESTIONS?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com