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1 Bloodborne Pathogens
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2 Standards 29 CFR 1910.1030 (Federal) Part 554 Bloodborne Infectious Disease (Michigan)
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3 Scope To protect workers against possible contamination from a Bloodborne Infectious Disease.
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4 When to comply? If there is an actual or reasonable anticipated risk of an exposure to blood or OPIM during routine tasks.
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5 Definitions Bloodborne pathogen HIV - the virus that causes the autoimmune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) (1-10+ years) Hepatitis B (HBV) - acute or chronic infection of the liver (incubation 2-3 months) Hepatitis C (HCV) (incubation 6-9 weeks) Syphilis (incubation 3 weeks) Others
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6 Definitions Semen Vaginal secretions Amniotic fluid Cerebrospinal fluid Perioneal fluid Pleural fluid Pericardial fluid Synovial fluid Saliva in dental procedures Any bodily fluid that is visibly contaminated with blood. Any body fluid that you cannot recognize if there is blood in it. Other Potentially Infectious Material (OPIM) (State Rule 325.7002(s))
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7 Definitions Sharps - Any item that has a potential to cut or puncture skin. (broken glass, needles, lancets, etc.)
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8 Exposure Determination/Categories Category A Reasonable exposure Non-routine tasks as a condition of employment. Category B No anticipated exposure
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9 Exposure Control Plan Exposure determination Implementation of the “rules” Training outline Incident reporting and evaluation SOPs Annual review Available to employees
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10 Methods of Compliance Universal Precautions Engineering and Work Practice Controls Personal protective equipment Housekeeping
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11 Universal Precautions Blood and OPIM treated as Infectious Material.
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12 Engineering Controls Reduce exposure by design Self sheathing needles Sharp containers Sinks
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13 Engineering Controls On January 18, 2001 OSHA Standard 29 CFR 1910.1030, Bloodborne Pathogens was revised. The major emphasis was "engineering" controls. Methods to reduce exposure Built-in safety devices Annual review Sharps injury log
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14 Engineering and Work Practice Controls: 1910.1030(d) Employers must select and implement appropriate engineering controls to reduce or eliminate employee exposure.
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15 Engineering and Work Practice Controls The employer must: Train employees to use new devices and/or procedures
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16 Sharps Container
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17 “SESIP” New Definition Non-needle sharp or a needle with a built- in safety feature or mechanism that effectively reduces the risk of an exposure incident. Sharps with Engineered Sharps Injury Protections
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18 Hypodermic syringes with “Self-Sheathing” safety feature Self-sheathed protected position
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19 Hypodermic syringes with “Retractable Technology” safety feature Retracted protected position
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20 Phlebotomy needle with “Self-Blunting” safety feature Blunted protected position
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21 “Add-on” safety feature Attached to syringe needle Attached to blood tube holder
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22 Retracting lancets with safety features Before During After In use After use
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23 Disposable scalpels with safety features Retracted position Protracted position
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24 Work Practices Reduce exposure by work habits Wearing gloves Washing hands Using sharp containers NO food, etc.
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25 Work Practice SOPs Standard Operating Procedure Each task should have a written procedure to reduce risk of exposure.
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26 Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Choose the correct ones for the task Gloves, Protective Eyewear, Face Shield, etc. DON & DOFF
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27 Housekeeping PPE Recordkeeping
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28 Regulated Waste Determination of Regulated Waste Michigan Law Medical Waste Regulatory Act - Part 138
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29 Laundry Employer’s responsibility Personal Procedures (CDC Guidelines)
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30 Vaccination When Cost - Employer’s Expense Time Waiver What does it really mean?
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31 Vaccination Efficacy, safety, benefits, administration Availability & Cost Timing Responsibility Waiver
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32 Waiver What is it? What does it really mean? Employee has the right not to receive the HBV vaccine: however, must sign a waiver. The employee does have the right to request a HBV vaccine at a later date, at the employer’s expense.
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33 Post Exposure Determination Procedure prophylaxis Confidentiality
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34 Labels and Warnings Labels Colors Symbols
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35 Recordkeeping Training Post exposure
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36 Recordkeeping: 1910.1030(h) Sharps Injury Log Only mandatory for those keeping records under 29 CFR 1904 Confidentiality Maintained independently from OSHA 300 log
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37 Sharps Injury Log At a minimum, the log must contain, for each incident: Type and brand of device involved Department or area of incident Description of incident
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38 Engineering and Work Practice Controls (con’t) The employer must: Train employees to use new devices and/or procedures Document in ECP
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39 Training Outline Qualifications Law Access to Plan Annual retraining
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