At our location, we require travelers to
have an annual PPD and one within 30 days of their start date.
Kathy Dayvault, RN, BSN, MPH
Manager, Occupational Health and
Safety
WorksWell Onsite
Dekalb Medical 2701 North
Decatur Road
Decatur, GA 30033
ph: 404.501.4972 Fax:404-501-2045
kathy.dayvault@dekalbmedical.org
From:
Tara Dockery <tdockery@oceanbeachhospital.com>
To:
MCOH/EH <mcoh-eh@mylist.net>,
Date:
01/26/2017 11:12 AM
Subject:
Re: [MCOH-EH]
Growing Pains for Centralized Employee Health
Sent by:
"MCOH-EH"
<mcoh-eh-bounces@mylist.net>
Melanie (or anyone else with
an opinion on this!),
My Epidemiologist tends to
believe that because we have travelling Providers, or agency nurses that
move around from place to place, that it would not make sense for them
to get their PPD done at every place they go to. He feels (an unwritten
policy should be) that they have a 2 step PPD on hire, then annual testing
every year, unless there was an exposure, etc.
My issue is that the agency/contract
does not have the policy that is in their head, so when they present to
work they do not carry the 2 step from hire and every annual PPD since
then.
I have devised that I will
take one if they are recently, and if it is out of date I will then tell
them they are due for another (and either place a TST or order a T-spot)
and give them a copy.
Do any of you do anything
different?
Tara Lee Dockery, IP, MT(ASCP), BS
Infection Prevention and Employee Health
Ocean Beach Hospital and Clinics
174 First Avenue North
Ilwaco, Washington 98624
tdockery@oceanbeachhospital.com
Office Phone 360 – 642 - 6307
Cell Phone 509-760-7397
Fax 360-642-6309
From: MCOH-EH [mailto:mcoh-eh-bounces@mylist.net]
On Behalf Of Swift, Melanie
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2017 3:41 PM
To: 'mcoh-eh@mylist.net' <mcoh-eh@mylist.net>
Subject: Re: [MCOH-EH] Growing Pains for Centralized Employee Health
First of all, don’t be discouraged
that your tracking system is getting outdated for your growth. Our TB tracking
system used to be a room full of index cards, one for each employee, with
a series of 12 holes near the border representing each month. Your designated
month for testing would be clipped out to the edge of the card. Once a
month, we’d run a knitting needle through that month’s hole in a big
stack of cards, give it a shake, and if your card fell to the floor it
was time for your TB test! I am not making this up. (This was before I
got here of course. I am much too young to even know what “index cards”
are...)
Some tips on TB surveillance:
1. Be
sure you are only doing annual TB testing for locations that are at medium
risk per the CDC 2005 guidelines. In the US, most outpatient clinic settings
are likely to be low risk. Unless of course it’s a TB clinic or a special
population. So do a critical check – do you really need annual testing
at all of these off site locations?
2. For
those who need annual testing, we programmed our tracking system to set
their next test due one year from their latest completed negative result.
So it’s staggered throughout the year. Our system starts sending weekly
reminder emails a month before their next service is due (not just TB,
any test.) This is helpful because people can easily get off track – they
have an exposure and need earlier testing, they might be out on leave through
their normal testing month and get it when they return, etc. And people
are hired year round.
3. We
have a designee program. We train nurses to place TSTs, and to read a completely
normal result (if there is erythema or induration they must see one of
our staff for a final read.) We have over 500 of these designee nurses
scattered across the system, so each site can have several who can do that.
Also we allow MDs and NPs to read a completely normal result without going
through our class. Again we still insist on seeing any erythema or induration.
We feel we cannot trust that training is good enough to be reliable for
that. Even if everyone could accurately measure 7mm of induration, we need
to talk to the person to interpret that – are they immunosuppressed? Are
they postexposure? Not questions a coworker should ask. We use REDCap for
them to enter the reads, our staff review the data for QA purposes and
enter them in our tracking system.
4. We
have an outreach nurse position - she travels to the offsites for everything,
not just TB, and coordinates a crew of PRN nurses to extend our reach.
5. To
Wendy’s point, if IGRAs are dirt cheap and readily available where you
are, you could switch to a system where employees can go to a lab to have
it drawn with results sent to you. We aren’t able to do that here as it’s
just too expensive. ($270 a pop, and even if we did our full volume the
best price we could get is $50. Yes you can quote the SWITCH study to me
until you’re blue in the face, but the “total costs” of people getting
skin tests don’t hit my budget. Only the PPD and the syringe do!)
Hope it helps and good luck!
Melanie Swift, MD
Director, Vanderbilt Occupational
Health Clinic
http://occupationalhealth.vanderbilt.edu
From: MCOH-EH [mailto:mcoh-eh-bounces+melanie.swift=vanderbilt.edu@mylist.net]
On Behalf Of Weaver Meredith
Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2017 2:58 PM
To: 'mcoh-eh@mylist.net'
Subject: [MCOH-EH] Growing Pains for Centralized Employee Health
We are facing the challenges of providing
employee health services to healthcare system that is growing a very rapid
pace. New clinics, off-site locations, and departments are being
added monthly, if not weekly. I have two questions for the group.
1. One of our greatest
challenges is in administering our tuberculosis testing program. We
currently place PPDs based upon the designated month for the employee’s
department. It is becoming more and more difficult to manually update
and maintain a list that is then tied to our electronic employee health
record. How do you administer your TB program? Do you designate testing
by department by month, by the employee’s birth date, etc.? What
challenges or advantages have you seen with your particular program method?
2. If your healthcare
system has gone through or is going through rapid growth, how have you
managed providing fitness for duty testing and exposure management follow
up to your off-site employees? Do you outsource, contract with other hospitals,
travel, etc.?
/
Meredith R.
Weaver, SHRM-CP
Manager, Employee Health
WVU Medicine
PO Box 8120
Morgantown, WV 26506-8120
Phone: 304-598-4000 ext.
77719
Clinic: 304-598-4160
Fax: 304-598-4957
weaverm@wvumedicine.org
WVUMedicine.com
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