There are millions of glucose test lancets used daily, to test the blood sugar levels of individuals with diabetes. I use them daily.

They are used in hospitals – where several incidents have occurred of disease transmission caused by a careless, probably criminally irresponsible, failure to use a new needle or lancet for each patient and to sanitise the lancet holder between patients – and widely used in the community, by every patient with insulin-dependent diabetes and many others with Type II diabetes controlled by drugs and/or diet.

How to dispose of these lancets? In hospitals and other healthcare premises, it should be a straightforward issue of dropping them into a sharps bin immediately after use. At home, matters are less easy. We might hope that insulin-injecting diabetics have been given a sharps bin for their used needles and insulin pens, and the blood test lancets can be placed into these. For others, the change of a GP issuing a sharps bin alongside a blood testing kit are rather slim, if not impossible. And, of course, no straightforward procedure for disposal once a bin has been filled.

Four primary school children in Tasmania have cause a health scare after pricking each other with a needle from a glucose testing kit.

The children at a school in the Derwent Valley, northwest of Hobart, underwent infection tests as a precaution after the needlestick incident on 9 May. “The incident involved four primary school students who used one or more needles from a diabetic test kit to prick each other,” Tasmania’s acting director of public health Dr Mark Veitch said in a statement.

The risk is perhaps small, but not so small as to be discounted and these children will need follow-up over several months. The psychological impact, for the children and more so for their patents, cannot be overstated.

And kids will be kids. Strangely, a discarded needle can be in some way attractive and pierce inquisitive little fingers. That message must reach each and every user of hypodermic needles and blood testing lancets to ensure safe disposal at all times.

 

 

sharps-injuries-eu-may-2013The implementation of UK legislation to enable compliance with Council Directive 2010/32/EU is now in place and so many organisations are working hard to prepare guidance notes for healthcare providers.

One of the best, so far, is from the NHS Confederation who note that regulations implementing EU law (the “Sharps Directive”) come into force across the UK on 11 May 2013. All NHS employers and employees need to be aware of and act upon the additional requirements (over and above existing health and safety legislation) resulting from the new regulations. This Briefing outlines the key changes and their implications for the NHS.

New regulations on the prevention of sharps injuries will apply from 11 May 2013.

They apply only to employers, contractors – but critically only to contractors who are embedded into on-site operations – and workers in the healthcare sector (whether public or private).

Many of the requirements form part of existing health and safety law in the United Kingdom, but the regulations also introduce extra, more specific, requirements.

The NHS European Office and NHS Employers have worked closely with the Health and Safety Executive and with employers’ organisations and trade unions in Europe, to try to ensure that the new rules are sensible and workable for the NHS.

Download the NHS Confederation publication Protecting healthcare workers from sharps injuries

 

 

 

Needle with drop of bloodIreland has not been backward at making the most of EU laws and subsidies though it has now found itself in deep financial peril as a consequence.

But less advantageous though equally worthy EU legislation, to implement the requirements of Council Directive 2010/32/EU, has been surprisingly slow to implement in Ireland. Trade unions have claimed that the health of Irish healthcare workers has been put at risk by Ireland’s failure to implement an EU directive on the use of medical needles.

The Irish Congress of Trade Unions says member states were due to adopt the directive – the eve of International Nurses Day.

ICTU’s legal affairs officer Esther Lynch said needlestick injuries among healthcare workers were ‘notoriously’ unreported – and that workers were injured anywhere between 1,000 and 6,000 times a year. ICTU has called on jobs minister Richard Bruton to implement Irish laws, giving legal effect to the EU directive, without delay.

“The Health & Safety Committee of Congress is recommending the establishment of Needlestick & Sharps injury prevention committees to oversee the implementation of the Directive,” Lynch said.

“These committees should include representatives from all levels, employers and unions including health and safety representatives, occupational health, risk management, purchasing, housekeeping, infection control, employee education and training.”

With a number of high profile sharps injury claims from Ireland in recent months, this is perhaps rather surprising. Hopefully, the lack of formal legislation will not stop healthcare providers from doing the right thing and purchasing safety sharps without delay.

 

 

 

Non-consensual testing after needlestick injury is an increasingly important issue for many healthcare workers, and also for police, prison officers and others who have suffered a sharps injury with a needle from an individual who is known but in circumstances where his/her infection status is unknown.

This creates an immediate and hugely important question – do we treat the sharps injury victim with anti-retrovival drugs, or can this be avoided safe in the knowledge that the source patient is not infected?

This particular legal and ethical drama is played out regularly – though in the waste sector the opportunity to identify the source patient is inevitably lost raising the index of suspicion for all sharps injuries in this group.

A recent training case is described here, by Charles Foster and Jonathan Herring of the University of Oxford Practical Ethics blog.

 

Like many patients in ICU, X is incapacitous. He also needs a lot of care. Much of that care involves needles. Late at night, tired and harassed, Nurse Y is trying to give X an intravenous injection. As happens very commonly, she sticks herself with the needle.

What comes next?

The case is reviewed from the perspective of barristers acting for X and for Y. Played out as if in The Royal Courts of Justice the judgment is of crucial importance, but perhaps surprisingly it is not given. You decide!

 

 

 

There has been an increasing tendency in recent years to downplay the risks of acquiring bloodborne virus infection. Statistics are quoted, showing that in general the risks of acquiring a bloodborne virus infection are:

  • for HIV transmission after a percutaneous exposure approximately 0.3%
  • for HBV transmission 6 to 30%,
  • and for HCV transmission is approximately 1.8%

 

Easy stats and generally low numbers. Reinforcing the message that the risks might be small is the fortunately exceptionally low incidence of reported cases of seroconversion, and an understanding that the risks may be higher with a deep wound, with a large bore hollow needle, with a needle heaving contaminated with fresh blood, with a needle used only moments before with a patient who had a high viral load. Added to this are reassuring messages of the value of immediate first air – making the wound bleed and washing it thoroughly with soap and water – or seeking immediate medical advice and, if appropriate, of taking post-exposure prophylactic (PEP) drugs to prevent HIV and a big jab in the buttock to protect against Hepatitis B. And then, all will be hunky dory!

But of course that isn’t quite so straightforward. Not everyone will receive that immediate first aid from an infectious diseases specialist who can properly manage subsequent PEP and follow-up. Others may be fobbed off and sent away from A&E for just a ‘trivial’ wound without thought for the impact and implications.

Others may simply fob off a small scratch or blood splash to already broken skin or to the eyes, dismissing that splash inoculation as simply a nuisance without recognition of the significant infection risks that it may carry. And how to manage the post-injury follow-up in the information is incomplete; if the needle had been discarded and the period between use and injury is not known; if the needle user cannot be identified?

Since a high proportion of IV drug users are Hepatitis C positive the risks must be heightened, but evidence from albeit a handful of reports are that assessment in A&E is inadequate and even if you can progress past the first triage assessment and see a junior doctor few such sharps injuries are recognised as potentially serious enough to warrant immediate referral to a specialist.

That immediate referral is now mandated by EU Council Directive 2010/32/EU for health service employees but as yet there is no evidence for similar standards for non-healthcare employees such as waste handlers and local authority staff who are being fobbed off with possibly inadequate treatment.

The implications may be profound.

We are increasingly aware of the often severe and profound psychological impact of sharps or needlestick injury† that has been in the news recently after a scientific investigation of this problem but which has been discussed many times over the years on the Clinical Waste Discussion Forum (check using the search system and browse the archive files). This too requires care in the immediate management and follow-up of sharps injuries and other blood and bloodstained body fluid exposures. Those who may be at risk by virtue of their employment must be trained properly and adequately briefed to ‘make a fuss’ for prompt specialist treatment in exposure does occur.

The various criteria and conditions of exposure or injury noted above can heighten or reduce the risk profile of any individual sharps injury event. So it is with considerable concern to read a recent case report from Brazil:

Brum MCB, Filho FFD, Yates ZB, Viana MCV,  Chaves EBM. HIV seroconversion in a health care worker who underwent postexposure prophylaxis following needlestick injury. American Journal of Infection Control 2013; 41: 471-2

They describe a case of HIV seroconversion in a health care worker who underwent PEP after accidental HIV exposure in Brazil. In December 2007 a nursing assistant aged 42 years working in an infectious disease unit experienced a thumb injury while performing a hemoglucotest. The health care worker wore a latex glove during the procedure yet was injured while collecting the test device, the lancet of which had not been completely enclosed and was left on the table after the procedure. The percutaneous injury on the surface of the thumb caused slight bleeding that was immediately washed.

Leaving aside the possibility of drug resistance of this particular strain of HIV, which was a possibility but was not proven by laboratory testing, this worker had PEP initiated within 2 hours of injury, maintained for 28 days. However, 4 months after exposure the worker was diagnosed with HIV infection.

There are several levels of concern. Not least is the observation that injury was caused by a lancet, a thin cutting spike intended to draw just a drop of blood from a finger prick for blood sugar testing. No hollow bore needle, and no deep injury – lancets are designed to prevent deep injury no matter how hard you try. These circumstances would, almost certainly, screen out a sharps injury victim from almost every sharps injury management protocol.

 

† Green B, Griffiths EC. Psychiatric consequences of needlestick injury. Occupational Medicine 2013; 63: 183–8

 

 

To promote safer injecting and to minimise harm Warwickshire’s Drug and Alcohol Action Team have developed new stickers for sharps boxes.

The stickers have been designed to signpost people to the four Recovery Partnership drug and alcohol treatment centres across Warwickshire.

Injecting drug users are at risk to a number of harms, including:

  • Damage to the injection site as a result of poor injecting technique
  • Bacterial and fungal infections(such as localised abscesses and systemic infections) as a result of poor injecting technique, contaminated drug products, and sharing vials and/or reusing injecting equipment
  • Blood-borne viruses such as HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C as a result of sharing used injecting equipment or sharing vials (that have become contaminated through reuse of injecting equipment) with other

 

The aim of this campaign is to encourage all injecting drug users to engage with treatment services in Warwickshire and in particular to get immunised against blood-borne viruses.

Hepatitis C is a major public health issue, research has shown that injecting drug use is the most common route of transmission for Hepatitis C, the cause of up to 90% of all new cases.

The stickers display a phone number and service opening times, and remind users that the drug and alcohol treatment service offered by The Recovery Partnership is confidential and free. Continue reading “Sharps bin stickers promote safer injecting” »

Needle with drop of bloodSharps or needlestick injury carries with it, in some circumstances, a predictable risk of bloodborne virus infection. The statistics, from which risk can be calculated, are well known and relate to the “average” used hollow bore needle used in clinical practise, and sharps injuries occurring during or soon after use.

There are many additional variables including the time between use of the needle and its involvement in a sharps injury, the amount of blood that it contains, the bore of the needle and depth of injury, the immune status of the victim, post-injury care, the virus concentrations in the blood if any, the time interval between injury and post-exposure prophylaxis if this is indicated, and probably other factors of which we know very little.

But we must not close our minds to the possibility that sharps-related infections are limited to HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C infections. Other infections can and do occur. In fact, the diversity of infections that have been reported is substantial though the list is bolstered by many individual laboratory acquired infections that arise as, one must hope, a one-off occurrence. Continue reading “Non-BBV infections after needlestick injury” »

Sharps injury is depressingly common but should be preventable. Less easy to prevent is a blood splash that can unexpectedly contaminate the face and eyes – eye in particular are a potent and often unrecognised route for infection.

Several approaches are possible to prevent sharps injury through the use of passive engineered safety sharps, good sharps safety practice including safe disposal, and safe management of BS EN ISO 23907 2012 compliant sharps bins at the point of use and as the pass along the disposal chain.

But not so at Huddersfield Royal Infirmary where some idiot placed a used and part-blood-filled syringe on top of a sharps bin that really should have been in a safe location well away from inquisitive children.

The parents now face a significant worry throughout and beyond a period of precautionary treatment, blood tests etc for the little lad, and hopefully a successful complain to the heath regulators, HSE and anyone else who will take real action to make sure that those responsible are properly reprimanded. If the culprit(s) can be identified I think it appropriate that the conduct committee of their professional body should be invited to investigate, with expulsion if appropriately found.

Huddersfield Royal Infirmary medical director  David Wise said: ‘This is unacceptable and should never have happened and for  that we apologise to the family.

‘We have reviewed the environment on the unit  and are issuing a reminder to all staff that sharps boxes must be kept in a safe  location to make  sure that this does not happen to anyone else.’

But that’s just not good enough. Placement of sharps into a sharps bin is a perfectly reasonably safety precaution and those who are so lax in syringe disposal should face severe professional reprimand and/or regulatory action. The more fundamental issue of placement of the sharps bin, out of reach of children is too a well-recognised issue and should not be a new concept but part of established and quite routine practice. Failure is a matter for the regulator.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2318186/Toddler-blood-mouth-syringe-doctors-waiting-room.html

 

A heroin-using grandfather who stuffed a used syringe into a supermarket loaf of bread that was later bought by an unsuspecting mother has been jailed for a year.

The woman discovered the needle – which had  been stuck through the middle of the loaf by 62-year-old David Rodgers – after  she used the bread to make her 10-year-old son a chicken sandwich for his school  lunchbox, Manchester Crown Court heard.

Rodgers, from Weaste, who was traced by a  speck of his blood left inside the syringe, had contaminated the loaf in a  branch of Tesco Extra in Salford last December.

He claimed to be ‘deeply remorseful’ when he  appeared in the dock to answer charges of contaminating or interfering with  goods with intent to cause public alarm or anxiety in a rare  case.

The needle he concealed in the loaf was found  to contain no infectious diseases.

 

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2312071/Grandfather-jailed-year-putting-used-syringe-loaf-bread-used-mother-make-sons-school-lunch.html#ixzz2RfwqTRlT

Once again, this week (22nd to 28th April 2013) is the highlight of the Marine Conservation Society’s fight against marine litter with the Big Beach Clean-up.

Over 110 beaches across the UK and Ireland are going to see volunteers coming together to do a beach clean and litter survey which will highlight the issues of beach litter around our coastlines.

http://www.mcsuk.org/foreverfish/index.php

Hosted by your local M&S store team – and all credit to Marks and Sparks for their sponsorship of this valuable quarterly event [let's hope they bring some of their lovely sandwiches] - the beach clean and survey will last a couple of hours, leaving the rest of the day free for you to enjoy the beach. Continue reading “This septic isle?” »

In a landmark case involving reversal of a no liability finding for needlestick injury that occurred in a Queensland holiday apartment the circumstances of injury, and the legal wrangles, send shivers down the spine.

Wright v KB Nut Holdings Pty Ltd [2013] QCA 66

The Queensland Court of Appeal has held a hotel manager liable for a needlestick injury that a guest sustained while staying in a short-term rental apartment, reversing the original decision of no liability.

The trial judge had not been satisfied that a more competent cleaner or system of cleaning would have led to the discovery of the needle (which was in the crease of a stairwell and was dislodged by the guest when she was cleaning the apartment). He did not consider it reasonable to expect an apartment manager or cleaner to search and discover a concealed needle.

The Court of Appeal reversed this decision, finding that:

    1. it is likely a cleaner using normal skill, diligence and equipment would have detected the needle;
    2. it was probable that the needle was obscured from the guest’s vision as a direct result of the unclean state in which the apartment was handed over to her;
    3. the hotel manager knew or should have known of the risk of injury; and
    4. the build-up of ‘filth’ in the apartment increased the risk that dangerous objects would not be seen until after they were stood on or touched, which may have been with bare feet or hands.

The hotel manager was ordered to pay compensation of $494,759.38, plus interest.

This decision confirms the importance that rental property owners need to place on implementing thorough systems of regular cleaning and inspections.

Quite right too. But isn’t it a warning also, that if you arrive at a rental apartment or hotel room, the immediate response when finding it dirty is to walk back out again and go somewhere else – its not your job to get down and clean it!

And of course, we wish the injured guest well, with the medical and psychological implications of that sharps injury.  AS$494,759.38 (about £330.000) should help.

 

 

Some time has passed since this paper by Green and Griffiths was published. Unsurprisingly, the professional journals and magazines, and the trades union RCN are up in arms about the impact to nurses, and separately to surgeons and physicians. Quite right too.

But the paper, which investigated the psychological welfare of 17 individuals having sharps injury. Only 5 of these five (29%) were in “the health sector (nurses and paramedics)” while the remainder fell into a category of ‘other occupations’ which involved police officers, porters, cleaners, a builder, a manager and one unemployed person.

Of the 3 brief case individual reports included in the paper, only 1 was a healthcare worker. This lady was injured while working in an accident and emergency department. Perhaps a nurse, or possibly a support worker/cleaner, we are not told, the lady was emptying a clinic bin and was replacing a bag when a needle, which had been incorrectly disposed of, pierced her leg. The remaining 2 cases involved a coach driver and postal worker respectively.

Leaving aside the serious issue of a healthcare professional incorrectly placing a used needle into a soft-walled clinical waste sack, the occupations of those involved in this sharps injury series requires further consideration. With so much noised from the medical and nursing professions, about the risks and impact of sharps injury that they may face, it seems that it is the ancillary worker and others who are at real risk.

We at Blenkharn Environmental and at the Clinical Waste Discussion Forum and are doing all we can to highlight the risks of waste handlers and ancillary and support staff. Perhaps the waste and services sectors simply have no voice. At least, they could shout a little louder.

Today, the press are getting excited about proposals for a safe injection facility – a shooting gallery – for Brighton.

This would provide a safe environment for IV drug users, where help is at hand and an interface is provided to support and rehabilitate those at the very bottom of society’s ladder.

Some will be aghast at the proposal, which pampers to this vile lifestyle. Others will recognise the considerable advantages, to improve healthcare, to get people away from a chaotic lifestyle and off the streets.

In the US, where such facilities are quite common, the norm is for a clean and secure unit where facilities are available for the use of clean needles, safe injections, and correct disposal of paraphernalia. The moral majority will be pleased to know that there are few home comforts.

Our concern will be for sharps safety. For every person using a shooting gallery there will be not one less needle discarded on the streets, but at least one, every day! And with no needle staying, the public health and safety implications are clear.

It’s a brave move for Brighton, but somewhere has to be first.

Needle with drop of bloodI am often asked how much compensation might be expected after a sharps injury, and this is one of the common search terms used when visiting the Clinical Waste Discussion Forum.

For most ancillary workers and waste handlers, expect around £3k, though with legal fees the defendant might expect the cost to fall between £7-10k.

In one notable case here in London, a young doctor suffered a sharps injury and claimed post-traumatic anxiety and stress symptoms that made it impossible for her to handle a needle again. This blighted her career and in the High Court she picked up £500,000!  But not so for the rank and file who fare much less well.

Now a recent South Australia case a mum of four has been awarded $494,750 compensation after a holiday unit needlestick incident. The Claimant lived for 18 months with the fear of getting HIV after being stuck by a needle in a “filthy” Brisbane holiday apartment and says she has never recovered from the anxiety of having repeated “indeterminate” HIV test results, until finally getting the all-clear. “It’s ruined my life”.

We should be pleased for the Claimant, that she has finally been shown not to be infected with HIV. The sum awarded, plus no doubt not inconsiderable costs will be picked up by the insurance company. That sum total is the true cost of a sharps injury, which pays more for the post-injury psychological damage than physical injury. Quite rightly, this shows some recognition of the sometimes profound stress and anxiety that can follow sharps injury. In the UK and UK, solicitors are becoming well aware of this and plan their case accordingly, so expect the defence to demand ever more stringent tests to conform the validity of psychological trauma.

Regrettably, there still seems a considerable divide in the sum awarded with compensation payments ranging from £3k to £500k. But then, life is not fair.

 

 

The psychiatric distress caused by having a ‘sharps’ injury is consistent with being in a car crash, a study has revealed.

Published in the journal Occupational Medicine, the study explored the psychological effects of needlestick injuries, which can affect an estimated 100,000 people per year.

The study compared levels of depression and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder in people who had a ‘sharps’ injury with a control group who had suffered a different psychiatric trauma.

The researchers found that although none of the participants contracted an infection from their injury, psychiatric illness and distress lasted close to two months longer for every month the patient waited for test results.

“The chances of physical damage  are what are focused on by society, but these risks are in reality very small,” said lead researcher Professor Ben Green.

He said: “The main health implication of needlestick incidents is probably psychiatric injury caused by fear and worry.” Continue reading “‘Sharps’ injury is as traumatic as car crash” »

INeedle with drop of bloodn a House of Lords debate on 14 March 2013, Lord Turnburg asked the Government “what is their policy on testing for HIV in patients lacking capacity to give consent following a needlestick injury to a healthcare worker”.

It’s an important question, since source testing can shape the early decisions to administer potent but toxic and unpleasant anti-HIV drugs to the injured person.

The reply, from Earl Howe (Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Quality), Health; Conservative) was that “Where a person lacks capacity to consent their rights are protected by the Mental Capacity Act 2005, which determines that decisions on behalf of such a person have to be made in their best interests.

The department’s view is that both the taking of samples and the testing of samples previously obtained from a patient who lacks capacity to consent are therefore acts that may only be undertaken if they are in the best interests of the patient. This would include testing a patient for a serious communicable disease such as HIV following a needlestick injury to a healthcare worker.

The department’s view is that determining whether it is in the best interests of a patient who lacks capacity to take and test samples for the purpose of determining what treatment, if any, to offer a healthcare worker with a needlestick injury is a stringent test to pass. It involves assessment of the individual circumstances of the patient on a case-by-case basis.”

That’s a tough call, and one that might be better answered by the Government rather than the patient’s carers. A policy would help, rather than a fudge answer that expects the healthcare team to interpret complex legal matters – in haste – in the knowledge that it may come back and bite them in later High Court action. For the needlestick ‘victim’ that offers no solace.

Neither too does it offer anything to the injured waste handler working as a hospital ancillary and support worker, in the waste management sector or for a Local Authority. For them, a needlestick injury will always be the same result – do we assume the worst and embark on a long and difficult course of ant-HIV medications since the source patient on whom the needle was used, or the user who discarded the needle, will always be unknown.

The Government might have helped with a straightforward yes or no, but regrettably the law is almost never that simple. But for those in eh waste management sectors, the opportunity will not arise anyway. The source is unknown.

On every post-exposure treatment algorithm, this places the injured person in the highest risk category. Other factors are involved such as the likely age of the needle, was it a deep wound from a large hollow bore needle – but did you stop to find out? – but this involves always something of a terrible gamble.

A gamble with a life. Make sure that its not yours or one of your workforce.

 

 

Statutory Instrument 2013 No. 645, Health and Safety: The Health and Safety (Sharp Instruments in Healthcare) Regulations 2013 was laid before Parliament on the 21st March 2013.

Dozens of used medical needles scattered along a Long Beach street next to a youth handball court were removed Sunday by a Nassau hazardous-materials team.

The syringes were found by three children who rode their bikes and scooters to East State Street just off Monroe Avenue, and reported the finding to their parents around 12:25 p.m.

Well done, kids, for reporting this.

 

http://longisland.news12.com/news/children-find-thousands-of-used-needles-on-east-state-street-in-long-beach-1.4888496?firstfree=yes

 

 

 

A second Lanarkshire hospital has been slammed over stained mattresses and the unsafe use of sharps disposal bins.

Monklands Hospital in Airdrie was the subject of an unannounced inspection by the Healthcare Environment Inspectorate (HEI) during which six of nine mattresses inspected were found to be damaged or stained.

In the news recently when a foetus was found in a clinical waste bin, Monklands hospital had a HEI visit in January, when inspectors also discovered that lids on sharps disposal bins were not always used and found one large sharps bin sitting on a trolley at knee height, without the lid properly fitted. Also, sharps bins awaiting disposal were being kept on a ward, not in a locked area.

It is the second time Monklands has been warned over how it handles sharps, following an inspection in January last year.

And it comes less than two months after an inspection of Hairmyres Hospital in East Kilbride, in which inspectors also found stained mattresses and problems with the way sharps were handled.

The HEI issued five requirements as a result of the latest inspection of Monklands. The first two called for an effective mattress audit system and the implementation of standard precautions in handling sharps. The others relate to infection control. The report found that, overall, “the hospital was clean and well maintained”.

Of course, clean and well maintained does not go hand-in-hand with sloppy sharps management, especially when this is more that an isolated incident suggesting systemic failures in sharps safety management.

If I had been inspecting, I would have been demanding data on sharps injuries and reported near misses, including reports from waste management contractors, cleaning companies and laundry services of sharps discarded inappropriately.

Overall, these problems, of inappropriate storage of filled sharps bins that may relate more to shortage of porters that sharps mismanagement are not uncommon and might be seen in many hospitals. Few are really beyond criticism and all can do better. It is, perhaps more appropriate to consider these as a flag for further and more detailed investigation in order to identify those centres at which there are real issues that impact directly on safety.

In such cases, when serious and potentially dangerous performance is observed, the health regulator should liaise with HSE to ensure that where necessary an improvement notice is issued, with prosecution is warranted for the most serious failures.

 

 

 

 

A 12 year old Sunbury, Australia, girl faces an anxious wait after falling onto a discarded needle.

The girl slipped and fell playing in a park near Gibbons St Sunbury, cutting her arm on the hidden needle. She did not tell parents until later, when the arm became sore and swollen and they got medical help.

“I remember running towards the slide when I slipped and fell, landing on my left arm,” she said.

“I felt a sharp pain … and saw the needle, which I picked up and put in the bin.

“I wasn’t very happy about it at the time but I was too scared to tell my parents in case they blamed me.”

Her angry father has hit out at whoever discarded the needle, labelling it “irresponsible and dangerous”.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/leader/north/agonising-wait-for-12-year-old-sunbury-girl-after-she-fell-on-a-discarded-needle/story-fnglenug-1226605528310

Understandably, this is the cause for great distress, for the child and her parents and family. Not just today, but for the many months of follow-up that will follow, and possibly beyond. The impact is profound, and we wish them well.

Regrettably, stories like this are not uncommon. They serve to highlight the considerable risks from discarded needles, that seem far more common in recreational areas than elsewhere.

 

UK postal restrictions forbid the packaging and shipment of small quantities of sharps to some distant disposal centre, even when packages in a sealed ISO-compliant sharps container and suitably impervious outer wrapper.

That creates a problem for many community-based sharps users who must package their used insulin syringes and take these to a co-operating high street pharmacy, to a GP surgery of to the local hospital. Since funding for this additional waste stream is often overlooked and does not flow equitably from the PCT patients are often left to struggle to find someone who will take their sharps waste.

Let’s not fool ourselves into believing that in the US they have it right, since in may States the management of sharps from domestic users is simply appalling. However, some States and cities do operate or permit a sharps by post service. These seem to operate well, with no reported incidents. They must save money, and make life easier for all.

So, why not in the UK? The official answer if to blame Europe, which forbids shipment of bio-hazardous materials by post.

But in the UK, the NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme, operates nationally to invite all over-60s to send 3 tiny samples of faeces to a central testing lab. All for the very best of reasons, and repeated through advancing age, the programme seeks to identify those who warrant further and more detailed investigation for the detection of early, and very much treatable, bowel cancer.

How does it work? Just 3 smears of faeces on a set of test cards folded into a paper envelope. With name and dates etc clearly marked, these are placed into a simply unpadded plastic pre-paid envelope and sent 1st class letter post to the lab.

If this is permissible under UK (or European) postal regulations then why not the shipment of suitable sealed  and packaged small sharps bins for personal use?

Is there a hygiene risk? A risk of spillage, perhaps of faeces, or of sharps penetration though an ISO-compliant bin? Is the welfare or health & safety of postal workers in jeopardy? Is there some de minimis scale of bio-hazardous materials, and do thousands of faecal smears fall below the line?

It seems, regrettably, that we have looked at Post Office regulations and talked our way out of a perfectly good method for disposal of small numbers of used sharps that might arise from trustworthy and competent patients who might otherwise struggle to dispose of their used sharps.

What a great shame that is.

 

As the archive files of the Clinical Waste Discussion Forum will attest, several years before the start of the move toward introduction of engineered safety sharps I took a sceptical view of the protection that they might afford. IMG_0161Not for sharps users, the clinicians, nurses and scientists who might wield a syringe and needle to draw blood or administer an injection, but for those working as ancillary and support staff, and waste handlers, who might be exposed to used sharps as they pass along the disposal chain.

So sure was I that the potential reduction in injury would be manifest in fewer sharps injury events in ancillary and waste handlers that I placed a small wager with a colleague. It was will deep regret that I have been able to collect on that wager - a modest lunch – having seen the evidence of sustained carelessness in sharps disposal.

Has that claim really come true?

needleGlSharps incidents and sharps injuries to waste handlers have reduced only where mechanisation and bulk handling of carts, as opposed to manual handling of individual clinical waste bags and sharps bins, reduces opportunity for direct contact. Even where this has been possible, waste containers are still managed by hand as they are removed from wards and clinics, generally by cleaners and other ancillary workers who might have access to latex gloves or a pair of Marigolds but who will never have the benefit of sharps-safe gloves.

Safety engineered sharps come in tow distinct types, passive devices that activate automatically, usually via a spring-loaded retraction mechanism, and active devices that need some positive action by the user to flip a shield over the exposed needle.

My hypothesis was that a) since the passive devices are more complex they will be more expensive, b) financial constraints will see many Trusts choose the cheaper active devices, and that c) careless failures to engage the safety features of those active safety sharps who result in many of these devices discarded without activation. This would result in no protection for those encountering the needle during its journey through the disposal chain. To make matters worse, would those who can’t manage activation of the sharps safety feature be so concerned to dispose of the used sharps with the required care, or would these unprotected sharps be found in an overfilled sharps bin, in a waste sack or in the soiled lined on its way to the hospital laundry?

A new research paper from France (Needlestick injury rates according to different types of safety-engineered devices: results of a French multicenter study. Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology 2010; 31(4):402-7 DOI: 10.1086/651301 makes depressing reading. The authors objective was to evaluate the incidence of needlestick injuries (NSIs) among different models of safety-engineered devices (SEDs) automatic, semiautomatic, and manually activated safety) in healthcare settings. This was done by a multicenter survey involving no less that sixty-one hospitals in France, conducted from January 2005 to December 2006, examining all prospectively documented SED-related NSIs reported by healthcare workers to their occupational medicine departments. Participating hospitals were asked retrospectively to report the types, brands, and number of SEDs purchased, in order to estimate SED-specific rates of NSI.

More than 22 million SEDs were purchased during the study period, and a total of 453 SED-related NSIs were documented. The mean overall frequency of NSIs was 2.05 injuries per 100,000 SEDs purchased. Device-specific NSI rates were compared using Poisson approximation. The 95% confidence interval was used to define statistical significance. Passive (fully automatic) devices were associated with the lowest NSI incidence rate.

Among active devices, those with a semiautomatic safety feature were significantly more effective than those with a manually activated toppling shield, which in turn were significantly more effective than those with a manually activated sliding shield (p<0.001, Chi² test). The same gradient of SED efficacy was observed when the type of healthcare procedure was taken into account.

The authors conclude that passive SEDs, devices that do not require any action on the part of the user, are most effective for NSI prevention.

So perhaps we should expect that passive devices should be the gold standard safety-engineered device, for the protection of sharps users and inevitably therefore for the protection of ancillary and waste handlers.

And who else should we consider? Insulin-dependent diabetics not using insulin pens and IV drug users are particular problems since neither group is being offered safety-engineered sharps of any kind.

The devices look and feel differently and it takes some instruction and practice to use them effectively. For diabetics, that will involve a hugely complex and costly program of instruction – even if it takes just 2 minutes per patient that necessitates a hospital visit or GP appointment.

And for IV drug users, the probability for manual activation of a safety device after shooting up are probably small and possibly so small as to be negligible. For those clearing discarded sharps, the huge risk of injury and infection thus remains unchanged. There would (could?) be further advantages, since fully automatic and tamper-proof passive safety sharps are effectively single use only. This would eliminate needle sharing with a major impact on disease transmission rates among this vulnerable group.

Politics and public opinion will get in the way. Will it be accepted that IV drug users should be provided with expensive safety sharps? Would it be acceptable that they are trained in shooting-up? Should public money be spent in support of this group, even if there might be additional gains to society for reduced disease transmission rates though less needle sharing, and protection for those in the public sector who are tasked to clear discarded drug litter? The vociferous moral majority may well say no; there is considerable evidence for this with similar proposed public health interventions, for the creating of safe and accessible injection rooms that are provided in some other countries, or even the placement of secure sharps bins in high risk hot spots.

None of this bodes well for the safety of ancillary and waste handlers.

 

 

The Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) is offering grants in the form of sharps waste containers and/or kiosks, which CalRecycle will purchase and distribute to Approved California Local Jurisdictions (Approved Jurisdictions). The Sharps Grant Project (Sharps Grant), offered under the auspices of the Household Hazardous Waste (HHW) Grant Program, is a one-time grant to assist in the support of a safe, convenient and cost-effective infrastructure for collecting and disposing of home-generated sharps waste. Eligible jurisdictions must have direct responsibility for Household Hazardous Solid Waste Management and have established HHW sharps waste collection and public education programs or be able to demonstrate that they are in the process of implementing both this year. Local jurisdictions must distribute the sharps containers obtained through this grant to sharps users. All kiosks and sharps containers obtained through this grant must directly benefit public health and safety.

This one-time Sharps Grant Project (FY 2011/12) is now available. Please access the Guidelines and Instructions at: http://www.calrecycle.ca.gov/HomeHazWaste/Grants/SharpsFY1112/default.htm

 

So, what about sponsored sharps bins?  With the growing problem of IV drug abuse and the many areas blighted by discarded needles there can be little doubt, and there is much evidence to confirm, that thoughtfully placed sharps bins in parks and gardens, in public toilets, and in other areas where IV drug users congregate will be used by many with a corresponding reduction in discarded needles. Though a primary concern must be the reduction in opportunities for sharps injury, the added advantage is to prevent extensive needle sharing and thereby the burden of Hepatitis C and other infections infection.

Though the moral majority may complain, this is in almost every respect a win-win situation.

So why not sponsor bins, and perhaps the service that goes with it?  Roll it into contracts for clinical waste or more general hygiene services across a local authority area. Use it as a sweetener for future contract negotiations – but don’t describe it like that! Every way, it seems a winner, and may be a useful test bed for newer sharps containers and secure sharps collection devices.

Remember, you heard it first on the Clinical Waste Discussion Forum.

And let’s go further. The outside surface of a sharps bin is wasted space and might be used to carry advertising material alongside statutory markings. No, not eat at Joe’s Café, but something more useful such as a guide to source segregation of wastes, perhaps a reiteration of basic sharps safety guidance, of spillage management, or of hand hygiene?

 

With much evidence that suitable placed reminder messages reinforce the rules and standards of basic training and make a real difference in performance, this too seems like a win-win situation.

Remember, you heard this first on the Clinical Waste Discussion Forum too!

 

Needle with drop of bloodThe Health and Safety Executive have published “Health and Safety (Sharp Instruments in Healthcare) Regulations 2013 Guidance for employers and employees “This information sheet is for healthcare employers and employees. It will help you understand your legal obligations under the Health and Safety (Sharp Instruments in Healthcare) Regulations 2013 (the Sharps Regulations). The Regulations implement aspects of the European Council Directive 2010/32/EU (the Sharps Directive) that are not specifically addressed in existing GB legislation. They will apply from 11 May 2013.

All employers are required under existing health and safety law to ensure that risks from sharps injuries are adequately assessed and appropriate control measures are in place. The Sharps Regulations build on the existing law and provide specific detail on requirements that must be taken by healthcare employers and their contractors. This information sheet should be read in conjunction with other information on managing the risks of sharps injuries, and the associated risks of infection from blood-borne viruses. HSE guidance and links to other relevant guidance can be found on HSE’s website.”

It explains under what circumstances the Regulations apply, and provides practical advice on:

  • the safe use and disposal of sharps
  • training requirements
  • procedures for responding to a sharps injury

 

http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/hsis7.htm

 

 

 

“Two children, aged three and four when they suffered “needlestick” injuries while playing in a rubbish-strewn park, have each lost €38,000 damages claims against a local authority.

“Judge Matthew Deery said the grave upset of their parents, who understood the dangers associated with such wounds, had not been mirrored in the children.

“The judge said Lee Cox (4) and Helen Brown (3) had been taken to their doctors to get injections, which was not uncommon for children. Fears that might attach to an adult of developing blood-borne diseases could not be associated with them.

“Judge Deery, dismissing the claims, added that the council had installed CCTV and employed specialist teams of staff with a tractor and trailer and a JCB to keep rubbish cleared from the park.  The court could not say the local authority had acted with reckless disregard of the children.

http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/courts/children-lose-claim-for-38000-for-syringe-injuries-suffered-from-playing-in-local-park-29101270.html#sthash.cxRzZUTh.dpuf

 

I feel terribly sad about this. Though it is suggested that the Local Authority had made reasonable attempts at managing the situation of needle discards in this area, it nonetheless remains that the children did suffer a sharps injury and as a consequence had to undergo investigation and preventive treatments over a long follow-up period.

Too young perhaps to suffer significant psychological trauma, though now living with a fear of needles, it seems that it was Mum who suffered more. This was not reflected in the judgement, and perhaps in the eyes of the law it should not have been since the report refers only to a claim on behalf of injuries etc suffered by the two children but not their mother.

That is a tough decision, and perhaps one on which the instructing solicitor should reflect. Was the claim properly constructed?

The report makes sobering reading, not for the loss of a compensation claim, but to raise awareness that a sharps injury can impart a significant psychological distress in the affected individuals, and in the larger family group, whether the partner or parents of an affected individual. That needs to be recognised, and recognised in law.

Ian

 

Needle with drop of bloodNHS Supply Chain is running 8 regional events across the UK, 7 events for NHS staff and one event non-NHS staff. These days are being split into two, with the mornings covering the Safer Sharps EU Directive and the afternoons covering NPSA Safer Spinal Epidural Part B alert.

 

Location Date Venue Events available
Bristol Tuesday 5 March 2013 Hilton Bristol Hotel Both Safer Sharps and Spinal
Birmingham Wednesday 6 March 2013 Hilton Birmingham Metropole Safer Spinal Only (Afternoon session)
Manchester Friday 8 March Hilton Manchester Deansgate Both Safer Sharps and Spinal
Brighton Monday 11 March 2013 Hilton Brighton Metropole Both Safer Sharps and Spinal
London Friday 15 March 2013 Hilton London Towerbridge Both Safer Sharps and Spinal
Leeds Friday 22 March 2013 Doubletree by Hilton Leeds Both Safer Sharps and Spinal
Newcastle Tuesday 26 March 2013 Doubletree by Hilton Newcastle Both Safer Sharps and Spinal

Registration for these events will close 7 days prior to the event taking place

Event information

Full agenda and venue information will be sent along with confirmation of place up to one week before the event. Please note: Event timings are subject to change slightly, dependent upon the availability of guest speakers

Safer Sharps event schedule Safer Spinal event schedule
09:30am Presentations 1:30pm Presentations
10:30am Questions and answers 2:00pm Questions and answers
11:00am Supplier product demonstrations 2:30pm Supplier product demonstrations
12.30pm Close 4:00pm Close

 

These events offer:

  • Support and guidance from our Clinical Nurse Advisors, Procurement team and Account Managers
  • An overview of the range of new devices available from a wide range of suppliers
  • Support for NHS organisations with purchasing for safety initiative
  • Access to representatives from manufacturers to give advice, support and training
  • Access to representatives from relevant associations
  • An opportunity to arrange future local trials and evaluations.

Supported by:

  • Royal College of Nursing
  • Health and Safety Executive
  • Health Protection Agency
  • Safer Needles Network
  • NHS Commissioning Board

 

http://www.supplychain.nhs.uk/events/invites/clinical-event-days/

 

It would be wonderful if these sessions included authoritative information concerning safe disposal, and of the other features of Council Directive 2010/32/EU that mandates an improved sharps injury management protocol and effective review and follow-up by suitably qualified specialists. However, that is not to be.

 

Through we are continually criticising aspects of the management of sharps in the community, from self-administered medications to the management of drug litter, rest assured that compared to most areas of the US we are light years ahead.

Much of this is down to the NHS, providing a global catch-all health service that isn’t (yet) so fragmented to a myriad of small care providers at every level from GP or family physician through clinics and diagnostic/treatment centres to large insurance-led hospitals. Each wants to compete, surviving in a cut-throat commercial environment that eschews the rigors of standardisation and regulation and looks for the best available, and cheapest, option.

So too in the community, where few sharps users are provided with sharps bins by their prescribers. Margarine tubs, plastic drinks bottles and other ad hoc containers are pressed into service, which then find their way into the trash, the domestic waste stream, without raising a regulatory eyebrow. It’s all perfectly legitimate. That’s just how it works.

But is can be improved.

After all these years of poor disposal practice, one might imagine that the problem was plainly apparent and that the lessons were learned. Apparently, not so. So ISIPS, the International Sharps Injury Prevention Society, actually one of their contributors but they fail to identify who this is, is running a US-based survey to gather more information.

This can only be a good thing. If you are in the US, please contribute your experience by completing the SurveyMonkey questionnaire.

 

Even a relatively minor – none can be described as trivial – sharps injury or blood or bloodstained body fluid exposure can result in short-term or longer-lasting psychological harm. This may manifest as post-traumatic stress and anxiety, sometimes affecting an entire family group, forcing a change of career or occasionally an inability to work at all. The loss of income exacerbates the stress impact, resulting in sometimes life-long change to lives.

We have discussed this many times previously on the Clinical Waste Discussion Forum, too often to list here. Users wishing to review these posts can use the site search function or browse the archive files, which are not included in the search system.

Now, in a short report by Zhang and Yu from The Second Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University, Suzhou, China (Zhang MX, Yu Y. A study of the psychological impact of sharps injuries on health care workers in China. Am J Infect Contr 2013; 41(2): 186-7) the level of concern of sharps injury for healthcare workers are noted to be related to a number of adverse effects, including both physical problems and economic burdens, as well as psychological impacts. The authors note that published research in this area is limited compared with reports describing the incidence of sharps injury, situations when it happens, risk factors, and economic costs.

361 subjects (180 males and 181 females; 186 nurses and 175 doctors) were recruited to the study, all of whom had experienced at least one sharps injury. The majority (64.3%) did not report their injury.

The data show that 15.2% of respondents reported manifestations of emotional distress, such as anxiety, worry, frustration, panic, and even extremity numbness, after experiencing a sharps injury. More than half (57.6%) reported feeling that they had been or would become infected from their injury.

93.9% of respondents indicated that the major factor inducing negative psychological changes was the fear of infection of themselves or family members.

Another factor that caused frustration in HCWs was the inability to completely protect their own rights and benefits. Over-excessive behavior can be induced by psychological stress; 39.6% of respondents reported engaging in over-excessive behavior, with a significantly higher incidence in women than in men (P <0.05).

67.9% reported that their careers had been affected by their sharps injury, including diminished professional recognition and reduced professional enthusiasm. These effects were greater in the younger respondents (aged 20-30 years; P <0.05).

The comparable results for ancillary workers and waste handlers are unknown since, as yet, no large study has been contemplated. In all probability, the results may differ from those noted for healthcare workers since education and understanding of the issues involved are likely to be markedly different, sharping responses to sharps injury, even with full engagement with an appropriate medical follow-up.

The outcomes of sharps injury in waste handlers has been poor, with many not reporting injuries as these are seen as something of an inevitability, becoming almost routine; splash exposure with blood or bloodstained body fluids are generally, and incorrectly, not recognised as risk events. First aid and follow-up support is often limited, even in larger companies with an effective and accessible occupational health service that is likely to be detached from the ‘shop floor’ and effectively inaccessible in any reasonable timescale.

A local Accident and Emergency Department is the best port of call, though where there is a choice travel to a larger city hospital is likely to be a wise choice since these may have the appropriate specialist services.

Demand attention. Don’t be fobbed off as a trivial injury that can be managed at home with just a band aid. A comprehensive clinical review, preferably with urgent referral to a specialist infectious disease service. Despite this, it is still inevitable that some will be turned away from A&E, or left to wait for many hours in circumstances where early administration of post-exposure prophylaxis antiviral drugs, if indicated, is time critical.

Council Directive 2010/32/EU won’t help. Though this requires that each healthcare service develops strategies to minimise sharps injury and introduces safety sharps these are likely to be discarded without activation, into flimsy waste sacks rather than sharps bins, in the same way as at present. A safety sharps device will not change that negative attitude to safety and the welfare of others. Elsewhere, Trusts are required to develop plans for effective and rapid management of sharps injury with referral of staff to specialist services. Though it is intended that this care will be extended to contract staff such as cleaners and porters working permanently on-site, those not working for a healthcare provided are not included in this legislation and are likely to be denied access.

 

A mother opened a loaf of bread bought at a Tesco store to make a sandwich for her 10-year-old – only to discover it  contained a blood-covered needle used by a heroin-taking grandfather.

The mother had taken two slices from the pack  of Roberts wholemeal bread – which she had bought from the Tesco Express in  Pendlebury, Greater Manchester – when she made the shocking  discovery.

The needle had been pushed through the  plastic wrapper by David Rodgers, 61, when he visited the shop with his wife, in  a desperate attempt to avoid her finding out he was back on the drug.

Rodgers had already used the needle for a  heroin fix before he hid it in the bread last December.

The mother, who bought the loaf later that  day, was left ‘alarmed and distressed’ when she noticed the syringe while making  the sandwich for her son, Manchester Magistrates’ Court heard.

Regrettably, Tesco may get more bad press from this, but quite undeservedly so. However, it does serve to highlight the ever present risk of sharps exposure often in the most unlikely of locations.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2273746/Horrified-mother-making-sandwich-son-finds-blood-covered-heroin-addicts-needle-inside-loaf-bread.html#ixzz2K1ruJoqM

 

 

In Australia, the prison system has introduced needle exchange schemes to eliminate, as far as possible, the hazards to health of needle sharing among the prison population.

Rates of Hepatitis B and C and HIV are high and with a high incidence of IV drug abuse needle sharing had become inevitable, with a corresponding decline in standards of prison health.

Questions in today’s BMJ refer to the “glacially slow worldwide movement of redressing health inequalities in prisoners”, and the lack of such needle exchange schemes in UK prisons is singled out for criticism.

“Why is it taking so long for this policy to be rolled out in the UK? Regardless of personal views on whether prison should be for punishment or rehabilitation, it should not be punitive to health.

“Despite the UK Department of Health’s intention back in 1999 to “identify health problems, deliver treatment and ensure seamless transition back into the community,” the government seems unable to turn this into policy. Community needle exchange programmes have a long history of reducing harms, particularly the transmission of blood borne viruses such as HIV and hepatitis C. They also encourage people to engage with drug health services, thereby enabling social and psychological problems to be tackled.

“The rationale for needle exchange programmes in prisons is also clear. According to the 2010 Patel report, around 69% of people entering prisons had taken drugs within the past 12 months—40% of them within the past 28 days. Another UK report found that 69-75% of prisoners who had injected drugs inside prisons shared needles. A review of prison needle exchange programmes published in 2003 showed that they are feasible, reduce risky behaviour and the transmission of blood borne infection, and have no unintended negative consequences. Fears that needles could be used as weapons in prisons seem to be unfounded. The benefits of prison needle exchange programmes were also documented in a best practice guide published by the National AIDS Trust in 2011.

Brett J. Why have prison needle exchange programmes not yet been rolled out in the UK? BMJ 2012;345:e6211

There are several issues of concern. Is the management of sharps waste in prisons adequate?  What is, and can more be done to reduce, the risk of sharps injury among prison staff and others?

Greater control of drug abuse and the health risks associated by needle sharing in prisons may well be achieved by the introduction of needle exchange schemes. Alternatively, might there be a case for some reasonable security in prisons, to keep prisoners in and drugs and needles out? That too will have a significant positive impact on health, reducing the risks of needle sharing and sharps injury.