In 2014 at our Westwood UCLA hospitals and clinics, MDs were 24% of BBP exposures, nurse 23% and dentists 13 %. Very much aware of all the exposed populations, including many researchers on campus, students,
in addition to the many clinicians, custodians and others.
Warner
T. Warner Hudson, MD FACOEM, FAAFP
Medical Director, Occupational and Employee Health
UCLA
Health System and Campus
Office 310.825.9146
Fax 310.206.4585
Pager 800.233.7231 ID 27132
E-mail
twhudson@mednet.ucla.edu
Website
www.ohs.uclahealth.org
From: MCOH-EH [mailto:mcoh-eh-bounces@mylist.net]
On Behalf Of Dr Amber H Mitchell
Sent: Thursday, March 26, 2015 2:11 PM
To: mcoh-eh@mylist.net
Subject: [MCOH-EH] Physician BBF Exposures
Hi All,
Hope this finds you well. I just pulled the last 10 years of our EPINet data on sharps injuries and blood and body fluid (BBF) exposures and we’re seeing 25% rates occurring with physicians
for sharps injuries (compared to all other job descriptions/professions) and 11.2% for BBF exposures. This is likely a severe under-estimate as many physicians are not hospital employees and their incidents are therefore not being collected by hospital employee
health. Given a great deal of focus on nurses with these types of exposures, I don’t want the MD community to forget that they too need programs and protections in place to prevent their exposures.
Have others out there seen similar comparison incidents/exposures?
Does anyone out there have a great contact within the medical professional association community (AMA, ACOEM, ACS, etc.) to contact?
Thank you! Happy almost weekend.
Amber
Amber Hogan Mitchell, DrPH, MPH, CPH
President | Executive Director
International Safety Center
phone | +1.713.816.0013
email |
amber.mitchell@internationalsafetycenter.org
online |
www.internationalsafetycenter.org