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Sharp-Device Injuries to Hospital Staff Nurses in 4 Countries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Sean P. Clarke*
Affiliation:
Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research and School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
Maria Schubert
Affiliation:
Institute of Nursing Science, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland
Thorsten Körner
Affiliation:
University of Heidelberg Clinic, Department of General Practice and Health Services Research, Heidelberg, Germany
*
Associate Director, Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research, University of Pennsylvania, 420 Guardian Drive, Philadelphia, PA, 19104-6096 ([email protected])

Abstract

Objective.

To compare sharp-device injury rates among hospital staff nurses in 4 Western countries.

Design.

Cross-sectional survey.

Setting.

Acute-care hospital nurses in the United States (Pennsylvania), Canada (Alberta, British Columbia, and Ontario), the United Kingdom (England and Scotland), and Germany.

Participants.

A total of 34,318 acute-care hospital staff nurses in 1998-1999.

Results.

Survey-based rates of retrospectively-reported needlestick injuries in the previous year for medical-surgical unit nurses ranged from 146 injuries per 1,000 full-time equivalent positions (FTEs) in the US sample to 488 injuries per 1,000 FTEs in Germany. In the United States and Canada, very high rates of sharp-device injury among nurses working in the operating room and/or perioperative care were observed (255 and 569 injuries per 1,000 FTEs per year, respectively). Reported use of safety-engineered sharp devices was considerably lower in Germany and Canada than it was in the United States. Some variation in injury rates was seen across nursing specialties among North American nurses, mostly in line with the frequency of risky procedures in the nurses' work.

Conclusions.

Studies conducted in the United States over the past 15 years suggest that the rates of sharp-device injuries to front-line nurses have fallen over the past decade, probably at least in part because of increased awareness and adoption of safer technologies, suggesting that regulatory strategies have improved nurse safety. The much higher injury rate in Germany may be due to slow adoption of safety devices. Wider diffusion of safer technologies, as well as introduction and stronger enforcement of occupational safety and health regulations, are likely to decrease sharp-device injury rates in various countries even further.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America 2007

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