In 2014 we had 43% of our BBP’s were reported by physicians …

 

Terri Thrasher RN MSN

Sr Director HR Professional Services

Employee Health, Occupational Safety and Environmental Health, Workers Comp, Injury Management

Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

 

 

From: MCOH-EH [mailto:mcoh-eh-bounces@mylist.net] On Behalf Of Dr Amber H Mitchell
Sent: Thursday, March 26, 2015 5:11 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