Tag Archives: nosocomial

IESO Presenting at 2011 PureSafety Conference

On Tuesday September 14, 2011, Dr. Scott Harris will present ”OSHA in Healthcare: Out of Sight & Out of Mind?” at the 2011 PureSafety Conference in Nashville, TN. He is one of a handful of industry speakers invited to participate in the event.  Our web visitors can download sneak preview slides of Scott’s presentation here.  A technical paper on this presentation is scheduled for publication in OSHATracker in September.  Sorry, no release until then, but we will post it here as soon as it’s out.

So what is all the fuss about?  Based on a number of generally accepted myths about OSHA, members of the healthcare community may think that management would be justified in taking little or no additional action to prevent the spread of occupationally acquired infectious diseases or deal with other OSHA issues. The facts say otherwise.

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The New OSHA 30-Hour Class for Healthcare – Should We Care?

OSHA claims nosocomials to be “among the leading causes of death in the United States, accounting for an estimated 1.7 million infections and 99,000 associated deaths in 2002.”  If accurate, hospital-acquired infections, these things you catch while you’re there for something else, kill more people in the U.S. every year than AIDS, drug overdoses, food-borne illness, murder, highway, rail and plane crashes, lightning, tornadoes, West Nile Virus and workplace fatalities COMBINED.

OSHA has publicly stated, “The healthcare sector as a whole experiences 1.3 times the injury and illness rate for private industry, with hospitals even higher, at 1.8, and nursing homes fully double.”  They describe healthcare as having “a weak culture of worker safety” related to a lack of data on the prevalence of infections among healthcare workers (HCWs) and “a lack of effort by healthcare employers” in tracking or documenting them.  OSHA thinks too many of an estimated 16.5 million HCWs are getting sick at work and that voluntary standards are not working, largely due to poor safety programs and lack of regulatory oversight.

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OSHA Looking Hard at Healthcare Worker Infectious Diseases

In the May 6, 2010 Federal Register, OSHA published a Request for Information (RFI) to collect information from the healthcare industry on “occupational exposure to infectious agents in settings where healthcare is provided.”  This includes hospitals, outpatient clinics, clinics in schools and correctional facilities and “healthcare-related” settings ranging from laboratories that handle potentially infectious materials to medical examiner offices to mortuaries.  OSHA is specifically interested in current infection control strategies and practices and will use the information to “determine what action, if any, the Agency may take to further limit the spread of occupationally-acquired infectious diseases in these settings.”  The deadline for comments is August 4, 2010.  Download our Healthcare Alert for a brief summary.

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