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| July 18, 2008 DOL Home > News Release Archives > OSHA 1998 |
Archived News Release--Caution: information may be out of date. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
LABOR OSHA Press Release: OSHA Seeks Information on
Additional Ways to Eliminate Or Greatly Reduce Needlestick Injuries
[09/10/1998] For more information call: (202) 219-8151
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) is asking for information on additional ways to better protect health care workers from contaminated needles or other sharp objects. Such injuries can cause serious illness or death from bloodborne pathogens such as the hepatitis B virus, the human immunodeficiency virus, which causes Acquired Immunodefiency Syndrome (AIDS), and the hepatitis C virus. "Health care workers help us all get well and stay healthy. We want them to know we care about their personal health and safety, too," said Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health Charles N. Jeffress. "We've received many suggestions for reducing injuries caused by needlesticks. To determine the best strategies, we must begin by gathering information systematically to find out what measures are effective in the workplace." Hepatitis B infection among health care workers has been estimated to have sharply declined since OSHA promulgated its bloodborne pathogens standard on Dec. 6, 1991, from about 5,000 new infections in 1991 to 800 new infections in 1995. The incidence rate of hepatitis B infections among health care workers is now lower than the incidence rate for the general U.S. population. However, injuries from needlesticks and other sharp objects continue to be of occupational health concern because of the frequency with which they occur and the severe health effects they can produce. An estimated 600,000 such injuries occur annually in the workplace. While serious illness and possibly death can be a direct result of contracting a bloodborne disease, other effects can occur which less readily come to mind. In addition to the risk of disease transmission, workers may suffer from the side effects of drugs used to treat the diseases and from psychological stress because of the threat of infection after an exposure occurs. In response to these problems, OSHA is seeking information on strategies that have been successfully implemented in the work environment for eliminating or minimizing contaminated sharps injuries, and particularly on the use of safer medical devices designed to limit the risk of such injuries. In using the term "safer medical device," the agency is referring to the wide variety of implements designed to reduce the risk of needlesticks and other sharps injuries through such measures as substitution (using another device in place of a needle such as a needle-free IV connector), modification of the device to reduce the hazard (as with a blunt suture needle), or incorporation of safety features (as with a retractable-needle syringe). All responses received will be carefully reviewed and will assist OSHA in determining effective approaches to reduce these injuries and what role the agency may have in these approaches. Responses or comments should be postmarked on or before Dec. 8. They should be submitted in quadruplicate or one original (hard copy) and one diskette (5 1/4 or 3 « inch) in WordPerfect 5.0, 5.1, 6.0, 6.1, 8.0 or ASCII, to the Docket Officer, Docket No. H370A, Room N-2625, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20210, telephone (202) 219-5046. Comments of 10 pages or more may be transmitted by fax to (202) 219-5046, provided the original and three copies are sent to the Docket Office later. Comments can also be submitted via electronic response to http://www.osha-slc.gov/html/needle-form.html. Notice of the request for information was published in the Wednesday Federal Register. The text of the notice and the hyperlink to submit electronic comments can be found on the OSHA home page at http://www.osha.gov. (Once on the home page, click on "Federal Register;" click on "date of publication;" and finally, click on "1998.") Archived News Release--Caution: information may be out of date. |
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