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Safety and Health Information Bulletins - Table of Contents by Year > Disposal of Contaminated Needles and Blood... | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Purpose This information document explains OSHA's national policy regarding the disposal of contaminated needles/sharps and blood tube holders following blood drawing procedures. This is not intended to create new requirements and is not a change of any existing requirement or policy. This document addresses the prohibition against the removal of contaminated needles from medical devices unless no feasible alternative exists or it is necessary for a specific medical or dental procedure, as stated in OSHA's Bloodborne Pathogens Standard [29 CFR 1910.1030(d)(2)(vii)(A)]. This includes a prohibition against the removal of contaminated needles from blood tube holders following a blood drawing procedure. Blood collection needles and tube holders are separate devices used in combination to withdraw blood from a patient's vein. A blood collection needle screws into a blood tube holder, prior to use, then a blood tube is inserted into the holder to collect the blood being drawn from the patient. A blood collection needle has two ends: one at the front end that is inserted into a patient's vein and one at the back end which transports the blood from the vein through a rubber stopper into a blood tube. The tube filled with blood is then sent to a laboratory for analysis. While most conventional blood tube holders can be reused multiple times, in order to best control worker exposure to blood, most healthcare facilities discard the entire device, with needle attached after each use. As healthcare safety research indicates, needlestick injuries after blood draws are most likely to occur while removing the blood-drawing needle from the patient's arm or while disposing of an unprotected needle into a sharps container.(1) Because the reuse of tube holders requires the removal of used needles, exposing healthcare workers to contaminated, unsafe, back-end needles, professional phlebotomists have been urged not to reuse holders.(2) OSHA has concluded that the best practice for prevention of needlestick injuries following phlebotomy procedures is the use of a sharp with engineered sharps injury protection (SESIP) (e.g., safety needle) attached to the blood tube holder and the immediate disposal of the entire unit after each patient's blood is drawn. Background The Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act and the enforcement of OSHA's Bloodborne Pathogens Standard have increased awareness of injuries caused by contaminated needles. Safety-engineered medical devices have been improved and have become more available to health care workers. While engineering controls exist to significantly reduce injuries to healthcare workers, hazardous work practices continue to cause injuries. One practice that has gained attention is the removal of contaminated needles in order to reuse blood tube holders when drawing blood. The EPINet (Exposure Prevention Information Network) sharps injury database is coordinated by the International Healthcare Worker Safety Center at the University of Virginia and includes data from 90 healthcare facilities around the country that voluntarily participate in the network. EPINet data from 1993-2001 indicate that approximately 5% (1288/25,043) of injuries were caused by vacuum blood collection needles/tube holder sets. Of phlebotomy device injuries, 33% were sustained by phlebotomists and 7% by clinical lab workers; 11% occurred while "disassembling" phlebotomy needles, and 22% during or after disposal.(3) In the most recent two years of EPINet data (2000-2001), 146 percutaneous injuries from phlebotomy needles were reported from network facilities.(4) Of the 146 percutaneous injuries, 114 included descriptions of the incident provided by the healthcare worker. Of those, 12 reported that they were injured by the "back end" (tube-piercing end) of the phlebotomy needle; this translates to approximately 10.5% (12/114) of percutaneous injuries from phlebotomy needles. * Since phlebotomy needles are hollow-bore and blood-filled, they pose a high risk for transmission of bloodborne pathogens such as HIV, HCV, and HBV. Therefore, it is important, when using these devices, to utilize engineering and work practice controls to minimize the risk of needlesticks, which have been documented to occur as a result of removing phlebotomy needles from blood tube holders. Previous practice in a number of healthcare facilities was reusing blood tube holders with removable needles in order to reduce costs associated with device purchase and waste removal. However, removing contaminated needles and reusing blood tube holders can pose multiple potential hazards. The manipulation required to remove a contaminated needle, even a safety-engineered needle, from a blood tube holder may result in a needlestick with the back end of the needle, which is only covered with a rubber sleeve. The Bloodborne Pathogens Standard (29 CFR 1910.1030) and OSHA Instruction CPL 2-2.69, requires immediate disposal of the entire blood tube holder unit, with needle attached after activation of the safety feature, into a sharps container.(5) OSHA's Bloodborne Pathogens Standard (29 CFR 1910.1030(d)(2)(vii)(A)) provides: "Contaminated needles and other contaminated sharps shall not be bent, recapped, or removed, unless the employer can demonstrate that no alternative is feasible or that such action is required by a specific medical or dental procedure." More specifically, the CPL states that "...removing the needle from a used blood-drawing/phlebotomy device is rarely, if ever, required by a medical procedure. Because such devices involve the use of a double-ended needle, such removal clearly exposes employees to additional risk." In a June 12, 2002 interpretation letter, OSHA stated that in order to prevent potential worker exposure to the contaminated hollow bore needle at both the front and back ends, blood tube holders, with needles attached, must be immediately discarded into an accessible sharps container after the safety feature has been activated. Single-use blood tube holders, when used with engineering and work practice controls, provide a level of protection against needlestick injuries that is unattainable with reuse of blood tube holders. OSHA also requires the use of commercially available SESIPs. The following states OSHA requirements during disposal of contaminated needles or sharps. (6) Single Use of Blood Tube Holders:
Appropriate Disposal of Contaminated Sharps:
References 1. Blood Collection Needles and Tube Holders; Sharps Safety and Needlestick Prevention. ECRI 2001. [Back to Text] 2. Safety Alert. National Phlebotomist Association, Inc. [Back to Text] 3. EPINet Multihospital Needlestick and Sharp-Object Injury Data Report, 1993-2001; International Health Care Worker Safety Center, University of Virginia Health System (90 healthcare facilities contributing data). (Report provided 5/22/03.) [Back to Text] 4. EPINet Multihospital Needlestick and Sharp-Object Injury Data Report: Injuries from vacuum tube blood collection needle/holder, 2000-2001 (61 healthcare facilities contributing data). International Health Care Worker Safety Center, University of Virginia Health System. (Report provided 5/22/03.) [Back to Text] * Note: Other injuries from phlebotomy needles in the EPINet database may have involved the back-end of the needle, but unless the healthcare worker specifies which end of the needle injured them in the description section of the form, it cannot be determined from the data. [Back to Text] 5. OSHA Instruction CPL 2-2.69, Enforcement Procedures for the Occupational Exposure to Bloodborne Pathogens [Back to Text] 6. All requirements for employers with employees with reasonably anticipated exposure to blood or other potentially infectious materials are contained in 29 CFR 1910.1030. [Back to Text] |
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