Hospital Employee Health – June 1, 2011
June 1, 2011
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FDA balks at powdered-glove ban, warning label option blasted
Latex gloves are back on the public agenda. -
Social media is the message for occ health
Social media is opening up new avenues for delivering health and safety information. -
OSHA, NIOSH, et al blogs, tweets, tubes
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health: Science blog (www.cdc.gov/niosh/blog/), Twitter (twitter.com/niosh/), Flickr (www.flickr.com/photos/niosh/), YouTube (www.youtube.com/user/NIOSHSafetyVideos), Facebook and MySpace. -
Protect HCWs from hazardous drugs
Make sure your health care workers are handling hazardous drugs safely. -
Jt. Comm. Proposes 90% flu shot goal
Proposed changes in a Joint Commission infection control standard may accelerate the trend toward mandatory influenza vaccination policies. -
Proposed flu standard changes by TJC
The Joint Commission's proposed changes in the influenza vaccination standard for hospitals include the following: -
No hand hygiene? It could cost you
At the first sign of nosocomial spread of Acinetobacter baumannii, the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Presbyterian took a bold stance. Hospital employees and physicians would be held accountable for their hand hygiene. -
UPMC's fines policy on hand hygiene
Non-physician staff. Anyone found to be (a) noncompliant with infection control measures (does not wear appropriate personal protective equipment, observe hand hygiene practices, or clean equipment such as stethoscopes as expected) after being asked to do so and pertaining to MDR Ab patients, or (b) uncooperative with monitoring personnel will be sent home immediately. -
OSHA: Infectious disease standard still on table
Hospitals aren't doing enough to protect their employees from infectious diseases, U.S. Occupational Safety and Health (OSHA) administrator David Michaels, PhD, MD, told employee health professionals in a recent Webinar for members of the Association of Occupational Health Professionals in Healthcare (AOHP). -
There's the rub: The risk of sleepy surgeons
Just as hospitals are set to comply with new restrictions on medical resident hours to reduce fatigue, a leading sleep expert is questioning the schedules that could lead to sleep deprivation among practicing surgeons.