Code: JLCCA-R2
APPENDIX B*
Preventing HIV Transmission: Recommendations for Health Care Workers
Health care workers include, but are not limited to,
nurses, physicians, dentists and other dental workers, optometrists,
podiatrists, chiropractors, laboratory and blood bank technologists and
technicians, phlebotomists, dialysis personnel, paramedics, emergency medical
technicians, medical examiners, morticians, housekeepers, laundry workers, and
others whose work involves contact with patients, their blood or other body
fluids, or corpses.
These recommendations, based on recommendations
developed by the U.S. Public Health Service and Centers for Disease Control (3,
4), emphasize precautions appropriate to prevent transmission of bloodborne infectious organisms, including fly and
hepatitis B virus (HBV). These precautions should be routinely enforced, as
should other standard infection—control precautions. The risk of transmission
of HIV by parenteral exposure to a needle or other
sharp instrument contaminated with the blood of an infected patient is 1/200 or
0.5% (5). Yet most of these incidents are preventable and more emphasis must be
given to precautions targeted to prevent needlestick
injuries in workers caring for any patient. In addition to being informed of
these precautions, all health care workers should be educated regarding the
epidemiology, modes of transmission, and prevention of HIV infection.
The following precautions represent prudent
practices that apply to preventing transmission of HIV and other bloodborne infections by health care workers in the
workplace and should be used routinely, regardless of whether the workers or
patients are known to be infected with HIV or HBV.
1. Sharp items (needles, scalpel blades, and
other sharp instruments) should be considered as potentially infective and be
handled with extraordinary care to prevent accidental injuries.
2. Disposable syringes and needles, scalpel
blades and other sharp items should be placed in FDA approved, puncture-resistant
containers located as close as practical to the area in which they were used.
To prevent needle-stick injuries, needles should not be recapped, purposely
bent, broken, removed from disposable syringes, or otherwise manipulated by
hand.
3. When the possibility of exposure to blood
or other body fluids exists, routinely recommended precautions should be
followed. The anticipated exposure may require gloves alone, as in handling
items soiled with blood or equipment contaminated with blood or other body
fluids, or may also require gowns, masks, and eye-coverings when performing
procedures involving more extensive contact with blood or potentially infective
body fluids, as in some dental or endoscopic
procedures or postmortem examinations. Hands should be washed thoroughly and
immediately if they accidentally become contaminated with blood.
First
Adoption
*Connecticut Department of Health policy on
blood-borne pathogens. (1991)