Literature DB >> 18193724

Could the death of a BC or nurse have been prevented by using the hands-free technique?

Ted Haines1, Bernadette Stringer.   

Abstract

In 1991, Bernadette Stringer, a long time BC Nurses' Union health and safety representative, learned about the death of a 48 year old Victoria, B.C., OR nurse who had sustained a hepatitis C contaminated needlestick. This incident led to a study evaluating the hands-free technique's ability to decrease the risk of percutaneous injury, glove tear and mucocutaneous contamination during surgery that Ms. Stringer carried out in partial fulfillment of her Ph.D. (granted in 1998, by McGill University's Joint Departments of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, in the Faculty of Medicine). That study's main findings were published in 2002 in one of the British Medical Journal's publications, Occupational and Environmental Medicine. The following article will discuss aspects of Bev Holmwood's case, review the literature on the hands-free technique, and describe a new study that has again evaluated the hands-free technique's effectiveness.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18193724

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can Oper Room Nurs J        ISSN: 0712-6778


  1 in total

1.  Hands-free technique in the operating room: reduction in body fluid exposure and the value of a training video.

Authors:  Bernadette Stringer; Ted Haines; Charles H Goldsmith; Jennifer Blythe; Ramon Berguer; Joel Andersen; Christopher J De Gara
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  2009 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 2.792

  1 in total

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