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Injection Safety

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Some patients may demand injections, even against the advice of their health care provider ... use of auto-disable syringes for all injections ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Injection Safety


1
Injection Safety
  • Definition of unsafe injections
  • Problems of unsafe injections
  • Practices that harm
  • Recipient of injections
  • Health workers
  • General public
  • Promoting safe injections

2
Injection Safety
  • Safe practices
  • reconstituting vaccine safely
  • avoiding needle stick injury
  • safe disposal of injection wastes and sharps
  • Injection Safety education
  • Assuring Injection Safety in a campaign

3
Injection Safety
  • Definition of unsafe injections
  • Injections that harm the recipient, the provider,
    or that result in waste that is dangerous for
    other people.
  • The Problem
  • WHO estimates that 12 billion injections
    administered each year 50 (6 Billion) of which
    are considered unsafe
  • 25 to 95 of outpatient visits resulted in an
    injection (95 are therapeutic), which may be
    unnecessary

4
Injection Safety
  • In a year, unsafe injections may be responsible
    for
  • 8 to 16 Million cases of Hepatitis B
  • 2 to 5 Million cases of Hepatitis C
  • 80,000 to 160,000 cases of HIV
  • Others Parasitic (Malaria), bacterial (abscess),
    fungal and other infections

5
Injection Safety
  • Why unsafe injections are given?
  • Lack of knowledge of dangers of injection
  • False belief that injection are more effective
    than oral medications
  • Some healthcare workers may think patients want
    an injection, even when they dont
  • Some patients may demand injections, even against
    the advice of their health care provider
  • Some clinicians make more money if they give an
    injection

6
Injection Safety
  • Practices that harm the recipient of injections
  • Keeping freeze-dried vaccine more than 6 hours
    after reconstitution
  • Mixing two partially opened vials of vaccine
  • Storing medication and vaccine in same
    refrigerator
  • Applying pressure to bleeding sites with used
    material or finger
  • Vaccinating infants in the buttocks
  • use of unsterile needles and syringes

7
Injection Safety
  • Practices that harm the health worker
  • Re-using needles and syringes (sharpening, etc)
  • Carrying needles or placing them on a surface
    prior to disposal
  • Recapping needles
  • Reaching into a container of used syringes or
    needles

8
Injection safety
  • For Health Worker, Do No Harm principle
  • Give only necessary injections
  • Use sterile syringe and sterile needle for every
    immunization or DO NOT immunize
  • Arrange the workspace and institute disposal
    practices to prevent needlesticks to self and
    others
  • Most vaccinators give curative injections as well
    as immunizations
  • Most curative injections are not necessary

9
Injection Safety
  • Practices that harm the general public
  • Leaving needles and syringes in areas where
    children can take them
  • Giving or selling needles and syringes to vendors
    who will resell them
  • Leaving needles and syringes in areas accessible
    to the public

10
Injection Safety
  • Promoting safe injections
  • use of auto-disable syringes for all injections
  • proper storage and handling and reconstitution of
    vaccines
  • proper disposal of injection wastes and sharps
  • proper training of health care workers
  • public education and information dissemination

11
WHO-UNICEF-UNFPA joint statement on the use of
auto-disable syringes in immunization services
  • AD syringe and safety boxes should be supplied as
    a bundle for all campaigns
  • As of January 2001 no procurement service
    contracts for standard disposable syringes
    entered into by UNICEF
  • By the end of 2001, all countries should use only
    AD syringes or sterilizable equipment
  • By the end of 2003 sole use of ADs
  • All partners requested to finance not only
    vaccines but also the safe administration of
    vaccines, AD syringes and safe management of
    waste

WHO/VB/AVI
12
Injection Safety
  • Promoting safe practices
  • Proper storage and handling
  • Do not store vaccine diluents with other
    medicine such as insulin and laboratory reagents
  • Make sure that correct diluent is stored with the
    correct vaccine
  • Make sure that the correct diluent is issued and
    use for the correct vaccine

13
Injection Safety
  • Promoting safe practices
  • Reconstituting vaccines safely
  • Use ONLY diluent recommended by the manufacturer
    to reconstitute vaccine
  • Do not interchange diluents
  • The wrong diluent makes the vaccine ineffective
    and less able to provide protection against
    disease
  • The following vaccines require specific diluents
  • BCG vaccine
  • Measles-containing vaccines
  • Freeze-dried Haemophilus Influenza type b (Hib)
    vaccines
  • Yellow fever vaccine

14
Injection Safety
  • Reconstituted vaccines should be kept cool,
    between 2º and 8º C to maintain their potency
  • Place reconstituted vaccines in slits made in a
    foam piece that sits in the top a vaccine carrier
  • Discard reconstituted vaccine after 6 hours. BCG,
    measles-containing vaccines, yellow fever
    vaccines and freeze-dried Hib vaccines do not
    have preservatives. Death may occur

15
Injection Safety
  • Reconstituting vaccine safely, cont
  • Check expiry date of the vaccine diluents
  • Cool diluent prior to mixing
  • Draw entire contents of the diluent into the
    mixing syringe and empty it into the vaccine vial
  • Mix the contents of the vial either by gently
    shaking it or rolling it between fingers
  • Keep reconstituted vaccine cool - place it in
    slits cut in the top of foam pad that fits
    vaccine carrier

16
Injection Safety
  • Preventing needlestick injury
  • Do NOT recap needles
  • Do NOT bend needles
  • Do NOT manually remove needles from syringes
  • Do NOT transport without sharp container or
    safety boxes

17
Injection Safety
  • Disposal of injection wastes and sharps
  • No easy solutions
  • Use of leak-proof, puncture-proof containers for
    syringes needles
  • Sharp containers
  • Safety boxes
  • Needle-disposal boxes or needle destroyers

18
Injection Safety
  • Sharp Containers

19
Injection Safety
  • Sharp Containers should be
  • leak-proof
  • puncture-proof
  • clearly labelled with warning (easy for people to
    understand)
  • Do not overfill (only 3/4th is safe)
  • Do not transfer contents to other containers

20
Injection Safety
  • Sharps container

SAFE
UNSAFE
21
Injection Safety
  • Destroying syringes needles
  • Where available high temperature incineration is
    the best, but too costly to have it at every
    level
  • Therefore, other methods such as
  • Burial
  • Burning

22
Injection Safety
  • Incineration
  • The high temperature kills microorganisms
  • Completely destroys needles and syringes by
    burning at high temperature (800 0C)
  • Minimal toxic fumes from incinerator, less air
    pollution
  • Reduce volume of waste to minimum
  • But requires special facilities to be built
  • Costly complex to operate

23
Injection Safety
  • An example of a low cost incinerator- De Montford

De M
  • Locally built
  • Made of locally available bricks
  • Cost approx. US 1500
  • Temp can exceed 800 deg C

24
Injection Safety
  • Open burning - cheapest option
  • Combustion is at lower temperature
  • May not destroy injection equipment completely
  • More toxic emission, chances of more waste
    scatter
  • Usually done in open pit or metal drums
  • Fence off and clear area and warn people to stay
    away from site
  • Make sure that fire is not left unattended
  • Prevent waste from scattering littering

25
Open pit burning
26
Injection Safey
  • Burial
  • Burial can be for unburnt injection waste or
    waste generated by burning
  • The pit should be at least 1 meter in depth
  • It should be cordoned off to prevent access to
    site by people/children
  • Some even recommend covering pit with concrete
    when full

27
Injection Safety
  • Waste Burial Pit

28
Injection Safety
  • Injection Safety education
  • Training Re-training of of health care workers
    is important to reduce errors and to ensure safe
    injections
  • Communications and public education are also
    equally important to understand the risks and
    benefits of injections

29
Injection Safety
  • Assuring Injection Safety in a campaign
  • Develop an injection safety plan
  • Assess the situation and identify needs and
    challenges
  • Identify stakeholders
  • Develop a specific plan
  • Assuring safe injections at the point of use
  • Proper supplies of ADs and disposal boxes

30
Injection Safety
  • Assuring Injection Safety in a campaign
  • Assuring safe disposal of used injection
    equipment
  • Identify practical solutions
  • Assess options
  • Destruction points
  • Monitor disposal
  • Monitoring and evaluation
  • Regular supervisory visits
  • Final evaluation

31
Injection Safety
Thank You
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