Archive for: Featured

OSHA violations by healthcare facility type

By: David LaHoda November 5th, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

Total OSHA fines were down across all types of healthcare facilities as of the end the federal government’s fiscal year 2009, according to OSHA Statistics and Data Web page. (www.osha.gov/oshstats/index.html, accessed October 5, 2009.)

Medical and dental practices and hospitals saw the greatest decreases, 30%-40%, with nursing care facilities and laboratories showing more modest decreases at 12%-14%.

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H1N1 vaccine demand clogs hotline

By: Peggy Luebbert November 4th, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

Healthcare facilities around the country are feeling the effects of a decreased supply of H1N1 vaccines. Here in Nebraska an Iowa public health clinics are dealing with long lines of frightened people looking for protection this winter.

In the months before flu season began, many experts suggested setting up influenza hotlines, to mitigate the surge of patients, particularly in smaller facilities where isolation precautions are harder to adhere to.

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Nurses group to CDC: No excuse for N95 shortage

By: David LaHoda November 3rd, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

Given all the warnings to prepare for pandemic influenza during the past few years, it is just inexcusable for employers to shortchange nurses by not providing proper respiratory protection with N95 respirators, says the American Nurses Association (ANA).

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Weekly poll: Hand hygiene games

By: OSHA Healthcare Advisor Poll November 2nd, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

We’ve all heard it 1,000 times: Hand hygiene compliance is the number one way to reduce infections.

Despite that fact, medical facilities continually struggle with hand hygiene compliance. Many facilities have found that games and lighthearted competition usually create an atmosphere where employees are easily  motivated to wash their hands. Some others believe handwashing is strictly serious business.

What do you think? Does your facility use games to improve hand hygiene?

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Notes from the field: A caller just said there is a suspicious package at the back door!

By: Kathy Rooker October 30th, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

Believe it or not, healthcare facilities are not exempt from bomb threats. Recently, an office told me what had happened in their practice several weeks ago.

The practice had received some pediatric immunizations in a white Styrofoam box. At the end of the day that box was thrown in the dumpster. A few days later, the Receptionist answered the phone to hear a muffled voice say there was a bomb at the back door. The caller said he would “get Dr._____________” for not listening to him when he was in the office.

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Less stress means fewer accidents in the lab

By: Terry Jo Gile October 29th, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

Are some employees just accident prone? Is there a way to assess personality traits related to the propensity for getting into accidents? If you could identify such traits, could you generalize traits from one setting to another?

Although there is very little data on this subject, there is some. Samantha Dunn, in her book, Not by Accident: Reconstructing a Careless Life (Henry Holt, 2002), suggests that emotional states that lead to distraction can contribute to accidents. Anxiety, stress and depression are at the root of many accidents because they cloud judgments and slow reaction time.

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Hand hygiene fun and games

By: Evan Sweeney October 28th, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

Back in May I wrote about a hand hygiene tag, a game created by employees at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC). The idea was an interesting and well-received approach to hand hygiene compliance.

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Getting schooled: N95 and surgical mask 101

By: David LaHoda October 27th, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

With all the hubbub concerning whether to use N95 respirators or surgical/procedure masks for H1N1 protection, NIOSH posted a nice piece on the history, development, and effectiveness of these medical devices on its science blog.

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Weekly Poll: Patients or workers first?

By: OSHA Healthcare Advisor Poll October 26th, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

On Friday New York Governor David A. Patterson announced that Health Commissioner Richard F. Daines would suspend the regulation mandating influenza vaccines for healthcare workers.

The state maintained that he decision had nothing to do with impending lawsuits, rather the shortage of H1N1 vaccines.

In a released statement Daines said the state had told hospitals that because the H1N1 vaccine is in short supply, its more important to vaccinate patients before healthcare workers.

Who do you think should get priority with the H1N1 vaccines?

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NY lifts required flu vaccinations for healthcare workers

By: Evan Sweeney October 23rd, 2009 Email This Post Print This Post

New York Governor David A. Paterson announced Thursday evening that the State Health Commissioner Richard F. Daines, M.D. has suspended the mandatory influenza vaccines for healthcare workers.

The rationale has more to do with a shortage of the H1N1 vaccine than the temporary restraining order that was handed down by a judge last week,  State Department of Health spokeswoman Claudia Hutton told the New York Times.

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