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BLOODBORNE
PATHOGENS
Blood and other potentially
infectious materials should be dealt with immediately. Workers should
assume that the spill is infectious with HIV, HBV or other bloodborne
pathogens.
Procedure for Spills
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Put on single
use or reusable gloves
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Smaller spills
can be blotted with paper and placed in a bio - hazard bag for disposal
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For spills larger
than 100ml add TB effective disinfectant to the spill and allow it
to sit before blotting. Again, place materials in a biohazard bag
and dispose according to government regulations
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To disinfect the
area after a small spill, spray with a TB effective disinfectant and
allow at least 10 minutes of contact time. Surface should air dry
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For large spills,
mop the area with a TB effective disinfectant and allow at least 10
minutes of contact time. Remove excess solution with a mop and bucket
and discard solution using hot water. Allow surface to air dry and
launder mop heads
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If disposable
gloves are used, remove and place in biohazard bag. Wash hands immediately
using anti-bacterial soap
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If using reusable
gloves, wash with antibacterial hand soap with the gloves on. If visibly
contaminated, drop in a germicide solution before removal
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Complete spill
area clean up with normal cleaning procedures; i.e.: mop/bucket/autoscrubber,
using a disinfectant solution
HIV UPDATE AND
INFO
HIV is the virus that
causes AIDS. Once infected with HIV, a person can live for years before
developing AIDS. HIV gradually weakens the immune system and individuals
with HIV are considered to have AIDS when severe immunosuppression develops.
Transmission
HIV is mainly transmitted
in three ways:
Precautions
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Health care workers
should wear gloves and gowns when dealing with any patient
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Avoid blood/body
fluids of all patients
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OSHA (United States)
has issued the blood-borne pathogen standard, whereby employers must
provide employees with a training program on safe practices and protective
equipment when occupational exposure is a reasonable expectation.
Canada has similar standards
Description of
Body Fluids
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Blood and blood
components
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Body fluids containing
visible blood
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Semen
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Vaginal secretion
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Any unsecured
human tissue or organ
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Cerebrospinal
fluid
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synovial fluid
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Pleural fluid
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Peritoneal fluid
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Amniotic fluid
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Saliva
Treatment/Action
to be taken
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If in contact
with body fluids, use a sterile solution for eyes, nose or mouth
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If in contact
with skin, where there are no lesions, it is not considered to be
an exposure incident. Wash the area with soap and water
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If a persons'
blood or bodily fluids comes into contact with an open sore on the
skin, wash area with soap and water.
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Report the exposure
to your employee health services section if:
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You come in contact
with a persons' blood/body fluids (other than splashes on intact skin)
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This results in
HIV/HBV discussion and documents the exposure for later compensation
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Include date and
time of exposure
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Identify job description
or task being performed at the time of the incident
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Provide a detailed
description of the incident, the method of exposure, duration and
type of body fluid
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Identify the source
of the exposure and patients' history
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Practice decontamination
procedures
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HIV testing should
never be performed without counseling
In conclusion, take
the usual precautions, report any incident of exposure and contact the
health services office in your area for detailed information on HIV/HBV
and AIDS exposure and patients' history
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