| Literature DB >> 22007320 |
Abstract
Needlestick injuries frequently occur among healthcare workers, introducing high risk of bloodborne pathogen infection for surgeons, assistants, and nurses. This systematic review aims to explore the impact of both educational training and safeguard interventions to reduce needlestick injuries. Several databases were searched including MEDLINE, PsycINFO, SCOPUS, CINAHL and Sciencedirect. Studies were selected if the intervention contained a study group and a control group and were published between 2000 and 2010. Of the fourteen studies reviewed, nine evaluated a double-gloving method, one evaluated the effectiveness of blunt needle, and one evaluated a bloodborne pathogen educational training program. Ten studies reported an overall reduction in glove perforations for the intervention group. In conclusion, this review suggests that both safeguard interventions and educational training programs are effective in reducing the risk of having needlestick injuries. However, more studies using a combination of both safeguards and educational interventions in surgical and nonsurgical settings are needed.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22007320 PMCID: PMC3169876 DOI: 10.5402/2011/315432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Nurs ISSN: 2090-5483
Figure 1Selection of papers for the review.
Design of included studies.
| Author | Design | Sample criteria | Sample size | Blinding |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Punyatanasakchai et al. [ | Randomized controlled trail | Patients and surgeons from Ramathibodi Hospital, Faculty of Medicine Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand |
| No blinding |
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| Kovavisarach and Seedadee [ | Randomized controlled trail | Gynaecologic patients who underwent total abdominal hysterectomy (TAH) with or without bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO) at Rajavithi Hospital between September 1 1999 to August 31 2000. Primary surgeons and specialist assistants from the same hospital. |
| No blinding |
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| Nordkam et al. [ | Randomized clinical trail | Patients who underwent laparotomy. Surgeons from the Department of Surgery |
| Not reported |
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| Wilson et al. [ | Randomized prospective trial | Patients underwent an obstetric laceration repair in the labor and delivery suite from January 2005 through September 2006. Surgeons from Medical University of South Carolina |
| No blinding |
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| Sullivan et al. [ | Randomized control trial | All patients requiring nonemergent cesarean deliveries from January to September 2006. Surgeons from Medical University of South Carolina |
| No blinding |
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| Caillot et al. [ | Randomized control trial | Visceral surgical procedures performed in the surgical emergency department and 5 surgeons in the department. |
| Not reported |
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| Gaujac et al. [ | Comparative randomized trial | Consecutive patients with maxillomandibular fractures. Two emergency room surgeons. |
| No blinding |
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| Laine and Aarnio [ | Randomized prospective trial | All gloves used by the surgeons in 885 surgical operations at Satakunta Central Hospital. |
| Not reported |
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| Wang et al. [ | Quasiexperimental study | Students enrolled at Xiang Ya school of Medicine, Department of Nursing, in the 4-year nursing program |
| Blinding |
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| Naver and Gottrup [ | Randomized control study | Gloves tested on surgeons, assistants and scrub nurses in university hospital, Denmark |
| Not reported |
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| Thomas et al. [ | Randomized control study | Surgical procedures lasting more than one hour performed in department of general surgery, lady hardinge medical college and associated srimati sucheta kriplani hospital, New Delhi. |
| No blinding |
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| Laine and Aarnio [ | Randomized control study | All gloves used inconsecutive orthopaedic and trauma operations, conventional and arthroscopic in Satakunta central hospital, Pori, Finland |
| Not reported |
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| Lancaster and Duff [ | Cohort study | Gloves from obstetric and gynaecologic surgical procedures at University of Florida College of Medicine |
| No blinding |
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| Na'aya et al. [ | Cohort study | Gloves used in general surgical procedures in department of surgery, University of Maiduguri teaching hospital, Nigeria. |
| No blinding |
Intervention design and findings.
| Author | Consent rate (CR)/ Response rate (RR) | Intervention type | Surgical procedure | Randomization procedure and design | Study timeline | Outcome measure | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Punyatanasakchai et al. [ | Not reported | Double gloving | Episiotomy repair after vaginal delivery | The surgeons were randomly selected one of two envelopes, number 1 representing the single-gloving method and number 2 representing the double-gloving method. | 7 months | Glove perforation rate, duration of operation, position level of surgeons | No significant difference in the frequency of perforations between the double-outer gloves (22.6%) and single-gloves (18%). |
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| Kovavisarach and Seedadee [ | Not reported | Double gloving | Gynaecological surgery | Primary surgeons were randomly allocated to use either the single-gloving or the double-gloving method. | 12 months | Glove perforation rate, duration of operation | A significant difference was found in the glove perforation rate between double-inner glove (6.09%) and single gloving group (22.73%). No significant difference between the glove perforation rates in single gloves (22.73%) and in double-outer gloves (19.5%). |
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| Nordkam et al. [ | Not reported | Blunt needle | Abdominal wall closure | Surgeons were randomised by envelop to use either blunt needle or sharp needle | 6 months | Glove perforation rate, evaluation of the blunt needle | A significantly higher number of surgical procedures with perforations using the sharp needle ( |
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| Wilson et al. [ | Not reported | Blunt needle | Obstetrical laceration repair | Patients with obstetric lacerations were randomized to repair with either blunt or sharp needles. | 21 months period | Glove perforation rate, evaluation of the blunt needle, and position level of surgeons | No significant difference in the glove perforation rate between blunt and sharp needles. There was poor correlation between reported perforations and those detected by water test. Blunt needles were reported more difficult to use ( |
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| Sullivan et al. [ | Not reported | Blunt needle | Cesarean-delivery closure | Patients requiring cesarean delivery were assigned randomly to receive closure with either blunt or sharp needles | 21 months | Glove perforation rate, evaluation of the blunt needle, and duration of operation | A significant reduction in total glove perforation rate for the primary surgeon with blunt needles (7.2%) compared with sharp needles (17.5%) as well as for the assistant surgeons. |
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| Caillot et al. [ | Not reported | Double gloving | Visceral surgical procedures | Visceral surgical proceduresperformed in the Surgical Emergency Departmentwere randomly assigned todouble gloving or single gloving | 3 months | Glove perforation rate, detection of the perforation, duration of operation | Did not adequately compare the rate of glove perforation. |
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| Gaujac et al. [ | Not reported | 2 types of double gloving | Arch bar placement | Patients were equally divided into 2 groups. In group 1, 2, sterile surgical gloves were used; in group 2, a nonsterile disposable inner glove was used under a sterile surgical glove. | Not reported | Glove perforation rate, duration of operation | No significant statistical difference was found between 2 double gloving methods in terms of inner glove perforations |
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| Laine and Aarnio [ | Not reported | Double gloving | General surgical operations | Patients born in even years were operated on with double gloving and those born in uneven years were operated on with single gloving | 2 months | The glove type, the operating time, the type of surgery, the detection rate and location of perforation | A low number of perforations of the inner glove of the double-gloving system were detected. |
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| Wang et al. [ | RR: 86% | Educational training | NA | One class was randomly assigned to receive the educational intervention, and the other served as a comparison group, receiving standard education. | 4 months | Changes in knowledge and self-reported universal precautions behaviour, observed adherence to universal precautions, and self-reported needlestick injuries | The group that received the intervention scored significantly higher than the standard education group on both knowledge ( |
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| Naver and Gottrup [ | Not reported | Double gloving | Various types of gastrointestinal surgery | The surgeons, assistants and scrub nurses were randomized into one of two groups. In group one the operating team was using powder-free single gloves and group two used a powder-free double-gloving system. | Not reported | Glove perforation rate, detection of the perforation, and the position of the participants | A significant difference between single gloves and inner indicator gloves ( |
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| Thomas et al. [ | Not reported | Double gloving | General surgical operations | The gloving pattern was randomized into two groups of the equal number by sealed envelopes | Not reported | Glove perforation rate, detection of the perforation, evaluation of double gloving | In double-gloving pattern, 32 glove perforations were observed, of which 22 were in the outer glove and 10 in the inner glove. |
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| Laine and Aarnio [ | Not reported | Double gloving | Orthopaedic and trauma surgery | Before the operations, the surgeons were randomised to use either single gloves, double indicator gloves or a combination of two regular surgical gloves on top of each other | 2 months | Glove perforation rates, detection of perforations, operation types, and duration of operation | Significant difference in perforations of the inner glove in two of indicator gloves and in the regular combination gloves when the outer glove was perforated ( |
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| Lancaster and Duff [ | Not reported | Double gloving | Obstetric and gynecologic surgical procedures | The choice to single versus double glove was left to the discretion of the individual surgeon. | 7 months | Glove perforation rate, the association between position of the surgeon and perforation rate | 11% of single glove sets contained a perforation whereas only 2% of double glove sets contained a corresponding defect in the inner and outer gloves ( |
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| Na'aya et al. [ | Not reported | Double gloving | General surgical procedure. | The surgeons wore single or double gloves at their own discretion. | Not reported | Glove perforation rate, detection rate of the perforation, and duration of operation | A significant greater risk for blood-skin exposure in the single glove sets ( |