Celebrating Nurses’ Monumental Impact
There is a myriad of ways to participate in National Nurses Week, which is celebrated May 6-12, from honoring your staff RNs with a gift or event to taking steps to let...
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By: Jane Perry
Published: 10/10/2007
What does your sharps-safety training program look like? Are safety sharps widely available to your staff? For many of you, the answers might not be what they ought to be. According to the results of a survey1, many healthcare facilities aren't doing a very good job of training workers on how to use safety sharps correctly and consistently, and many employees don't even have access to them.
The survey showed that sharps-safety implementation, three-and-a-half years after OSHA mandated it, is a mixed picture. Of the nearly 500 nurses who responded, 13 percent said they don't use or seldom use safety devices in their facilities. Many with access to safety devices said they'd had little or no training on how to use them.
Survey findings
Healthcare employers have made some strides in evaluating and implementing safety-engineered devices. But as you'll see from this breakdown of the survey findings, there's much more work to be done.
The conversion continues, albeit slowly
In certain device categories, such as suture needles, most healthcare workers are still not using safety alternatives, such as blunt suture needles. In fact, says the survey, safety devices were used infrequently or not at all in more than 10 percent of healthcare facilities. Clearly, the safety conversion process is far from complete.
But the survey results also show that healthcare workers care about their safety and that most want to use protective devices whenever possible. Given the nursing shortage, employers should consider safety devices an investment in both safety and nurse retention. For surgical settings, that means making implementation of blunt suture needles a top priority, because they are the No. 1 cause of sharps injuries in this clinical area.
Reference
1. Perry J, Robinson ES, Jagger J. Needle-stick and sharps-safety survey: getting to the point about preventable injuries. Nursing2004 (April)34(4):43-47.
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