| Literature DB >> 27766172 |
Hagen Frickmann1, Wibke Schmeja2, Emil Reisinger3, Thomas Mittlmeier4, Karen Mitzner5, Norbert Georg Schwarz6, Philipp Warnke2, Andreas Podbielski2.
Abstract
This study assessed protective effects of a continuous introduction of safe instruments in terms of reduction of needle stick injuries. The retrospective study analyzed correlations between the increasing proportion of safe instruments and a reduction of the incidence of needle stick injuries linked to such instruments in a German university hospital over 5 years. Incidents declined about 17.6% from 80.3 incidents per 1000 employees to 66.2, associated with an increase in the proportions of injuries due to instruments without protective mechanisms such as scalpels or hypodermic needles by 12.2%. For injuries due to venipuncture cannulae in various surgical and internal medicine departments, there was a negative association between the proportion of safe instruments and the incidence of injuries. For injection needles, portacath needles, and lancets in selected internal medicine departments, the number of injuries also dropped during this study interval. However, there was no clear-cut association with the percentage of safe instruments. This observational study suggests a correlation between the implementation of use of safe instruments and the reduction of needle stick injuries in a case of a graduated implementation. However, the effects are much less pronounced than in previous interventional studies.Entities:
Keywords: implementation; infection risk; needle stick injury; occupational infection; prevention; safe instrument
Year: 2016 PMID: 27766172 PMCID: PMC5063016 DOI: 10.1556/1886.2016.00025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Microbiol Immunol (Bp) ISSN: 2062-509X
Available safe and unsafe venipuncture cannulae, injection needles, portacath needles, and lancets between 2008 and 2012 at the University Hospital Rostock
| Instrument | Manufacturer (and model) | |
|---|---|---|
| Unsafe | Safe | |
| Lancet | Braun (“Solofix Blutlanzetten”) | Owen Mumford (“Unilet”) Sarstedt (“Safety-Lanzette”) |
| Injection needle | Becton Dickinson (“Normkanüle/Microlance”) Sarstedt (“Multifly-Kanüle”) | Becton Dickinson (“Eclipse-Kanüle”) Braun (“Hypodermic Needle-Pro”) |
| Portacath needle | Smiths Medical Ltd. (“Portnadel Gripper”) | Smiths Medical Ltd. (“Gripper Plus Safety”) |
| Venipuncture cannulae | Braun (“Vasofix”) Becton Dickenson (“Venflon Pro”) | Braun (“Vasofix safety”) |
Characteristics of the injured
| Number of injuries ( | ||
| Single injury | 85.2% | |
| Multiple injuries | 14.8% | |
| • 2 Injuries | 11.2% | |
| • 3 Injuries | 2.3% | |
| • 4 Injuries | 0.9% | |
| • 5 Injuries | 0.1% | |
| • 6 Injuries | 0.3% | |
| Gender ( | ||
| Male | 29.1% | |
| Female | 70.9% | |
| Age ( | ||
| Mean age of injured (±SD) | 32.8 (±10.1) years | |
| Median age of injured | 30.0 years | |
| Minimum/maximum age | 17/64 years | |
| Profession ( | ||
| Nurse | 39.5% | |
| Medical doctor | 29.1% | |
| Medical student | 25.3% | |
| Medical technical assistant | 1.9% | |
| Cleaning staff | 1.9% | |
| Others | 2.3% | |
| Professional experience in years ( | ||
| Up to 5 years | n = 277 | 50.0% |
| 6–10 years | 16.8% | |
| 11–15 years | 9.0% | |
| 15–20 years | 7.9% | |
| 21–25 years | 6.9% | |
| More than 25 years | 9.4% | |
| Department in which the injured person worked ( | ||
| Surgical department | 28.8% | |
| Internal medicine | 27.8% | |
| Anesthesiology/intensive care medicine | 7.3% | |
| Neurology | 5.9% | |
| Orthopedics | 4.6% | |
| Dermatology | 3.9% | |
| Radiology/radiation therapy | 3.8% | |
| Others | 18.0% | |
Not all information was available for all data sets (n = 840). SD = standard deviation
Characteristics of the injuries
| Activity during the injury ( | ||
| Operation | 24.0% | |
| Cleaning activity | 19.8% | |
| Blood collection | 18.6% | |
| Subcutaneous injection | 12.3% | |
| Positioning of intravenous cannula | 6.8% | |
| Others | 18.5% | |
| Part of the body injured ( | ||
| Finger | 89.2% | |
| Digit I | 28.0% | |
| Digit II | 41.6% | |
| Digit III | 18.5% | |
| Digit IV | 7.6% | |
| Digit V | 4.3% | |
| Palm | 6.5% | |
| Forearm | 1.8% | |
| Back of the hands | 1.0% | |
| Belly | 0.4% | |
| Leg | 0.6% | |
| Foot | 0.5% | |
| Site of injury ( | ||
| Left body half | 60.0% | |
| Right body half | 39.8% | |
| Central | 0.3% | |
| Injuring instrument ( | ||
| Injection needle | 49.4% | |
| Hypodermic needle | 14.4% | |
| Intravenous cannula | 8.6% | |
| Scalpel | 7.9% | |
| Butterfly cannula | 6.9% | |
| Lancet | 4.0% | |
| Portacath cannula | 1.5% | |
| Others | 7.3% | |
| Distribution of injuries throughout the month ( | ||
| 1st to 5th day | 16.2% | |
| 6th to 10th day | 15.7% | |
| 11th to 15th day | 17.5% | |
| 16th to 20th day | 16.1% | |
| 21st to 25th day | 15.8% | |
| 26th day to end of the month | 18.7% | |
| Distribution of injuries throughout the week ( | ||
| Monday | 19.8% | |
| Tuesday | 17.7% | |
| Wednesday | 18,0% | |
| Thursday | 19.2% | |
| Friday | 13.5% | |
| Saturday | 5.4% | |
| Sunday | 6.5% | |
| Distribution of injuries by time ( | ||
| 00:00–05:59 a.m. | 1.8% | |
| 06:00–08:59 a.m. | 19.0% | |
| 09:00–11:59 a.m. | 31.1% | |
| 12:00–02:59 p.m. | 23.2% | |
| 03:00–05:59 p.m. | 13.1% | |
| 06:00–11:59 p.m. | 11.8% | |
| Distribution of injuries by working hours since the beginning of the working shift ( | ||
| 0–01:59 | 24.8% | |
| 2–03:59 | 23.5% | |
| 4–05:59 | 23.2% | |
| 6–07:59 | 16.8% | |
| 8–09:59 | 7.9% | |
| 10–11:59 | 1.5% | |
| ≥12 working hours | 2.3% | |
Not all information was available for all data sets (n = 840)
Distribution of safe and unsafe instruments in selected departments of the University Hospital Rostock and associated reported injuries
| Year | Safe instruments | Unsafe instruments | Injuries | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Number) | (Percentage, %) | (Number) | (Percentage, %) | (Number) | |
| Proportions of distributed safe and unsafe venipuncture cannulae between 2008 and 2012 at departments of traumatology, general surgery, pediatric surgery, cardiology, hematology/oncology, and gastroenterology, and associated numbers of injuries due to the respective instruments at the respective departments | |||||
| 2005 | 0 | 0.0 | d.n.a. | 100.0 | 0 |
| 2006 | 0 | 0.0 | d.n.a. | 100.0 | 2 |
| 2007 | 0 | 0.0 | d.n.a. | 100.0 | 1 |
| 2008 | 1,922 | 10.4 | 16,513 | 89.6 | 9 |
| 2009 | 11,367 | 52.4 | 10,325 | 47.6 | 5 |
| 2010 | 17,577 | 86.5 | 2,750 | 13.5 | 2 |
| 2011 | 18,899 | 87.1 | 2,800 | 12.9 | 1 |
| 2012 | 9,650 | 84.3 | 1,800 | 15.7 | 3 |
| Proportions of distributed safe and unsafe venipuncture cannulae, injection needles, portacath needles, and lancets between 2008 and 2012 at the departments of cardiology, hematology/oncology, and gastroenterology, and associated number of injuries due to the respective instruments at the respective departments | |||||
| 2005 | 0 | 0.0 | d.n.a. | 100.0 | 6 |
| 2006 | 0 | 0.0 | d.n.a. | 100.0 | 9 |
| 2007 | 0 | 0.0 | d.n.a. | 100.0 | 9 |
| 2008 | 2,125 | 4.3 | 47,133 | 95.7 | 18 |
| 2009 | 18,865 | 32.2 | 39,663 | 67.8 | 29 |
| 2010 | 37,700 | 62.9 | 22,198 | 37.1 | 14 |
| 2011 | 54,814 | 78.8 | 14,768 | 21.2 | 6 |
| 2012 | 30,678 | 84.1 | 5,800 | 15.9 | 13 |
*Documentation did not allow for discrimination of injuries due to safe and unsafe instruments
†Delivery data were available for the first half of the year only d.n.a. = data not assessed
Correlation between the percentage of safe instruments used and the number of injuries based on linear regression beginning from the start of the implementation of use of safe instruments in 2008
| Assessment considering the study bias | Correlation coefficient ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percentage of used unsafe venipuncture cannulae and injuries due to venipuncture cannulae at selected surgical and internal medicine departments | 2008–2012 | –0.9808 | 0.9619 | 0.0032 | 75.23 |
| without 2009 | –0.9803 | 0.9609 | 0.0197 | 49.21 | |
| without 2008 | –0.9088 | 0.8259 | 0.0912 | 9.49 | |
| Percentage of used unsafe venipuncture cannula, injection needles, portacath needles, and lancets and injuries due to these instruments at selected internal medicine departments | 2008–2012 | –0.6489 | 0.4211 | 0.2361 | 2.18 |
| without 2009 | –0.7473 | 0.5584 | 0.2527 | 2.53 | |
| without 2008 | –0.9126 | 0.8329 | 0.0874 | 9.97 |