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Risk of Blood Contamination and Injury to Operating Room Personnel

Authors :
Mark Gottlieb
Hannah Goodman
Edward J. Quebbeman
Gordon L. Telford
Betty Hardman
Karen Wadsworth
Susan Hubbard
Source :
Annals of Surgery. 214:614-620
Publication Year :
1991
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 1991.

Abstract

The potential for transmission of deadly viral diseases to health care workers exists when contaminated blood is inoculated through injury or when blood comes in contact with nonintact skin. Operating room personnel are at particularly high risk for injury and blood contamination, but data on the specifics of which personnel are at greater risk and which practices change risk in this environment are almost nonexistent. To define these risk factors, experienced operating room nurses were employed solely to observe and record the injuries and blood contaminations that occurred during 234 operations involving 1763 personnel. Overall 118 of the operations (50%) resulted in at least one person becoming contaminated with blood. Cuts or needlestick injuries occurred in 15% of the operations. Several factors were found to significantly alter the risk of blood contamination or injury: surgical specialty, role of each person, duration of the procedure, amount of blood loss, number of needles used, and volume of irrigation fluid used. Risk calculations that use average values to include all personnel in the operating room or all operations performed substantially underestimate risk for surgeons and first assistants, who accounted for 81% of all body contamination and 65% of the injuries. The area of the body contaminated also changed with the surgical specialty. These data should help define more appropriate protection for individuals in the operating room and should allow refinements of practices and techniques to decrease injury.

Details

ISSN :
00034932
Volume :
214
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....21bd2f894a83bd84a2155345e4ebdbba
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-199111000-00012