[Occupational risk of exposure to blood in nurses. Results of a one-year monitoring of the risk for nurses in 17 hospitals]
- PMID: 1299813
[Occupational risk of exposure to blood in nurses. Results of a one-year monitoring of the risk for nurses in 17 hospitals]
Abstract
To evaluate the incidence of risk factors for exposure of health care providers to patients' blood, a prospective multicenter study was carried out in 1990 in 17 hospitals in continental France. 521 nurses from 20 departments of medicine and 9 intensive care nurses participated in the study. Trained investigators documented exposures to blood using a standardized questionnaire and carried out monthly 24 hours cross-sectional surveys to determine the number of high risk procedures performed on a given day. One hundred and eighty-three exposures to blood were documented, for an incidence of 0.35/nurse/year. Needle-stick injuries were the most common events (75%). Exposure to blood occurred during a sampling procedure in 48% of cases, an infusion-related procedure in 20% of cases, and an injection in 17% of cases. Comparisons of rates of procedures associated with needle-stick injuries and of procedures performed during a typical day demonstrated differences in the magnitude of the risk associated with each procedure: infusion-related procedures carried the greatest risk, followed by venous blood sampling procedures. Sixty-four percent of exposures to blood occurred after completion of the procedure. Forty-nine percent of documented exposures to blood would probably not have occurred if universal infection control recommendations (CDC, DGS) had been implemented. Twenty-seven percent of exposures to blood involved HIV-positive patients, who accounted for only 7% of patients managed in the participating centers during the study period.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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