Showing posts with label healthcare safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label healthcare safety. Show all posts

Saturday, March 18, 2017

Industrial Hygiene Monitoring Considerations in Health Care Settings

In February 2017, I participated in an open call with the Industrial Hygiene Practice Specialty (IHPS) of the American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE) about industrial hygiene monitoring considerations in health settings. If you missed it, you can access the video and handout from the IHPS website.

Link to the video: https://vimeo.com/202830157 

Hear the #industrioushygienist speak about industrial hygiene in healthcare!

The gist of the presentation / open call was: "Healthcare workers are at risk for a variety of occupational exposures to chemical hazards, including hazardous drugs, anesthetic gases, and disinfectants. While resources exist for guidance on assessing occupational exposures to these hazards, there is no single resource for safety professionals in healthcare settings to use in developing a defensible industrial hygiene (IH) monitoring program."

We are working on a series of open calls to address some of the questions from attendees, so watch for that information in the near future. IHPS is hoping to share the expertise of our Volunteer Advisory Committee with safety professionals around the world through these open calls. 

The #industrioushygienist supports #ASSE and the Industrial Hygiene PS.

Monday, December 26, 2016

Qualified Safety and Industrial Hygiene Professionals in Healthcare

Note: A version of this post was originally published in in The Monitor, a technical publication of the American Society of Safety Engineers' Industrial Hygiene Practice Specialty, in August 2015.

Healthcare workers have the potential to experience a wide variety of occupational injuries. Under the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) Healthcare Safety and Health Topics webpage, OSHA lists the following as potential hazards: blood-borne pathogens (BBP) and other biological hazards, chemical and hazardous drug exposures, waste anesthetic gas exposures, respiratory hazards, ergonomic hazards, laser, hazards, workplace violence, and radioactive and x-ray hazards.

Chemicals such as formaldehyde, glutaraldehyde, ethylene oxide, peracetic acid, ortho-phthalaldehyde (OPA), and environmental disinfectants are sources of potential hazardous exposure for healthcare workers (OSHA, 2015). There is insufficient guidance for healthcare safety personnel to evaluate the risks associated with the use of these chemicals. Research evaluating the potential for synergism among chemicals used in healthcare that may adversely affect healthcare workers is scarce. The heightened awareness of infectious diseases such as Ebola and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) has led to increased use of environmental disinfectants throughout healthcare and other workplaces. More research and expertise is needed by qualified industrial hygienists and safety experts to properly recognize, evaluate, and control the hazards present in healthcare.

Despite the improved focus on patient safety, quality control and regulatory compliance, the injury and illness rate from healthcare workers are almost twice as high as the private industry rate. A news release from OSHA on June 25, 2015 explained that OSHA will be expanding enforcement activity in healthcare facilities. OSHA�s enforcement focus will be on preventable injuries, such as those from patient handling, BBP, workplace violence, tuberculosis, and slips, trips, and falls (OSHA, 2015).

OSHA has developed resources, checklists, and guidance for healthcare safety relating to building a culture of safety, injury and illness prevention programs and/or safety and health management systems, infectious diseases, safe patient handling, and workplace violence. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has also developed resources for healthcare safety relating to hazardous drug exposures, waste anesthetic gases, and latex allergies. Additional guidance is available from accrediting organizations such as The Joint Commission, DNV Healthcare, and Center for Improvement in Healthcare Quality(CIHQ), among others.

So, with all the resources and guidance available, why are the injury and illness rates so high among healthcare workers?

Some safety and health professionals might argue that the healthcare organizations are too focused on patient safety as opposed to employee safety, in order to improve their ratings and popularity. To combat this belief, The Joint Commission developed a monograph entitled �Improving Patient and Worker Safety: Opportunities for Synergy, Collaboration and Innovation� that explains the methods of coordinating quality improvement activities that will benefit both the patients and the workers. In the Foreword of the monograph, The Joint Commission explains that: �The organizational culture, principles, methods, and tools for creating safety are the same, regardless of the population whose safety is the focus. In fact, the same principles, methods, and tools may be separately used by different groups (clinical, human resource, and general liability personnel) within an organization� (The Joint Commission, 2012). This is not a surprise to healthcare safety personnel who came to the healthcare industry after training in other industries, but may be a pleasant discovery for healthcare safety personnel who were promoted into their position from other clinical or non-clinical jobs.

There is variability in the tasks performed by healthcare safety personnel. Depending on the size of the campus or healthcare organization, healthcare safety personnel may have many other responsibilities beyond occupational and patient safety. Some healthcare safety personnel serve as the Director of Materials Management, Director of Facilities, Risk Manager, or Director of Infection Prevention, and the safety management aspect of their job is only a small portion of their daily responsibilities. Others may also serve as the Compliance and Privacy Officer, Radiation Safety Officer, Laser Safety Officer, and other technical and regulatory required positions.

In a quick internet search of posted jobs for �healthcare safety officer� or �EOC safety officer,� the following job tasks and requirements were listed (not a comprehensive list):

  Conduct training of staff
  Know OSHA and EPA regulations
  Radiation and laser safety knowledge
  Chemical safety and proper disposal
  Develop education modules
  Know NFPA Life Safety Code
  Emergency management
  Chair the EOC Committee
  Conduct fire drills
  Process improvement
  Work independently
  Risk assessment
  Consultation and assessment
  Understand project management
  HICS and HSEEP Exercises
  5 to 7 years� experience in safety
  Manage hazmat program
  Familiar with ADA compliance
  Act as community liaison
  B.S. or M.S. in health sciences or safety
  Conduct emergency spill response
  Assist with laboratory safety
  Provide regulatory oversight
  Professional certification(s)


Healthcare safety personnel usually serve on a facility�s Environment of Care (EOC) Committee, which is an interdisciplinary team tasked with managing a facility�s physical environment in six functional areas: safety, security, hazardous materials and waste, fire safety, medical equipment, and utilities. The EOC Committee should have representation from clinical staff, security, healthcare administration, biomedical engineering, facilities engineering, infection prevention, employee health, laboratory, and other areas such as research administration that may be applicable to the facility.

Aspects of the Environment of Care are an integral part of the survey instruments used to score hospitals on sites such as Hospital Safety Scoreor the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAPHS). The results of these surveys are supposed to be used by patients to select hospitals and health systems based on patient safety and outcomes. The HCAPHS survey asks two questions related to the physical environment of the hospital and patient safety (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 2015):

  • During this hospital stay, how often were your room and bathroom kept clean?
  • During this hospital stay, how often was the area around your room quiet at night?

The Hospital Safety Score provides patients with a score for each hospital in the U.S. on an A through F scale, measuring safe practices such as (The Leapfrog Group, 2015):

  • Leadership structures and skills
  • Culture measurement, feedback, and intervention
  • Teamwork training and skill building
  • Identification and mitigation of risks and hazards
  • Hand hygiene
  • Falls and trauma

In reviewing the job tasks and requirements listed previously for healthcare safety personnel, it quickly becomes apparent that individuals holding a Certified Industrial Hygienist (CIH) or Certified Safety Professional (CSP) designation already have much of the required knowledge, skills, and abilities. Individuals with CIH/CSP designation who have not worked in healthcare before may need to learn more about BBP and infectious diseases, hazardous drugs, medical terminology, ionizing radiation, patient safety, laboratory safety, and the accreditation process.

Having a qualified, certified, and well-trained person at the helm of health, safety, and environmental compliance activities may help healthcare facilities to improve their overall culture of safety � both for patients and employees. In an informal survey of hospitals located within Arizona, 23 hospitals were awarded an �A� or �B� designation by the Hospital Safety Score method in June 2015. After those hospitals were identified, a search of LinkedInprofiles was conducted to evaluate whether the hospital had a qualified and trained safety and health professional serving in a healthcare safety role at the facility.

If the individual held a professional certification such as CIH, CSP, Certified Healthcare Safety Professional (CHSP), Certified Professional in Patient Safety (CPPS), orCertified Healthcare Protection Administrator (CHPA), it was noted in the survey. If the individual had also completed a master�s degree in safety, environmental management, business administration, healthcare administration, or other applicable degree, it was noted in the survey. The size of the hospital � and associated complexity of environmental health and safety management � is indicated by the number of licensed patient beds.

Table 1 details the results of the informal survey of Arizona hospitals with a Hospital Safety Score of �A� or �B� � identifying details such as the hospital name and actual number of licensed beds have been replaced with an identification number and a size range. Hospitals included in this survey range from small hospitals with less than 100 licensed beds, to large hospitals with 700 to 750 licensed beds. If the individual serving as the �safety officer� did so in an ancillary capacity (i.e., job title was Director of Facilities), and did not have any formal safety training documented in their LinkedIn profile, the �Safety Professional� selection was �No.� If the individual performed safety functions as the primary role, the �Safety Professional� selection was �Yes.� An �X� indicates that the individual held the professional designation and/or had a relevant master�s degree. 

Table 1: Informal Survey of Arizona Hospitals with a Hospital Safety Score of A or B (June 2015)

The data from this informal survey has been summarized into Tables 2 and 3 below. Table 2 shows the number of Arizona hospitals with a �Safety Professional� (e.g., a �Yes� answer) as compared with the number of Arizona hospitals with a person who acts as safety officer in addition to their other job duties (e.g., a �No� answer). Table 3 shows the number of Arizona hospitals with a �Safety Professional� holding a CIH/CSP, CHSP/CPPS/CHPA, or relevant master�s degree. The hospital size ranges associated with these trained professionals is also provided in Table 3.

Table 2: Arizona Hospitals with  Dedicated Safety Professional (June 2015)
Table 3: Arizona Hospitals with a Qualified and Certified Safety Professional (June 2015)

Of the 23 Arizona hospitals with an �A� or �B� rating on the Hospital Safety Score site in June 2015, 13 (56.5%) had a dedicated safety professional. One of the smaller hospitals (AZ002) was not able to be included in the survey results due to the lack of information about the hospital�s safety officer responsibilities and lack of presence on LinkedIn. Of the 13 dedicated safety professionals, 10 (76.9%) had obtained a professional level certification or relevant master�s degree. Hospitals employing these trained and qualified safety professionals ranged from small (<100 beds) to large (600 beds). Only 3 (30%) of the trained and qualified safety professionals held a CIH or CSP designation. The remainder of the certifications (70%) were from organizations such as the International Board for the Certification of Safety Managers, the Certification Board for Professionals in Patient Safety, and the International Association for Healthcare Security and Safety.

                Although only 10 (43.5%) of the 23 Arizona hospitals earning an �A� or �B� rating on the Hospital Safety Score site had safety and EOC responsibilities performed ancillary to the individual�s other job responsibilities, many of the hospitals represented in this informal survey are part of regional health systems spanning multiple states. These health systems may have regional or corporate level occupational health and safety personnel who serve multiple healthcare campuses and provide technical support to the facility-specific staff.

                As part of the �Improving Patient and Worker Safety� monograph, The Joint Commission listed several topic areas for targeted interventions with the goal of improving safety. Individuals with CIH/CSP designation that are looking to foray into the world of healthcare safety should research strategies, solutions, and benefits associated with this list. Healthcare systems looking to hire safety officers, safety managers, and directors of safety are looking for healthcare-specific knowledge that is difficult to obtain if you have never worked in healthcare before. An abbreviated and modified list of these topics is included below (The Joint Commission, 2012).

  • Safe patient handling (including use of lifts and slings)
  • Fall prevention (both patient and staff)
  • Sharps injury prevention
  • Infection prevention (including hand hygiene and personal protective equipment)
  • Assault and violence prevention and management
  • Security management
  • Emergency management (including the Healthcare Incident Command System)
  • Exposure to hazardous drugs
  • Surveillance and exposure assessment
  • Environmental hazards
  • Ergonomics and human factors engineering
  • Improving safety culture throughout an organization
  • Safer design of practices and the built environment

Qualified industrial hygienists and safety professionals are needed to take healthcare safety to the next level. With OSHA promising to increase enforcement action, and accreditation agencies like The Joint Commission requiring documented improvements in safety and quality measures, opportunities for solution-oriented and collaborative safety professionals are becoming available. Industrial hygienists are needed to evaluate acute and chronic exposures to workers that may be inadvertently passed on to patients. Safety experts are needed to bring the industry knowledge from manufacturing, aviation, power generation, and other high-risk industries into the healthcare arena.

As Dr. David Michaels, Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health, said in the news release from June 25, 2015: �[�] it�s time for hospitals and the health care industry to make the changes necessary to protect their workers� (OSHA, 2015). Let�s accept this exciting challenge and improve safety for all of the people that enter into, or are employed by, healthcare facilities. 

References

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. (2015, March 20). HCAPHS Online. Retrieved from HCAPHS Survey: http://www.hcahpsonline.org/files/HCAHPS%20V10.0%20Appendix%20A%20-%20HCAHPS%20Mail%20Survey%20Materials%20(English)%20March%202015.pdf
OSHA. (2015, June 27). Healthcare. Retrieved from Safety and Health Topics: https://www.osha.gov/SLTC/healthcarefacilities/
OSHA. (2015, June 25). OSHA adds key hazards for investigators' focus in healthcare inspections. Retrieved from News Release: https://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=NEWS_RELEASES&p_id=28197
The Joint Commission. (2012). Retrieved from The Joint Commission: http://www.jointcommission.org/assets/1/18/TJC-ImprovingPatientAndWorkerSafety-Monograph.pdf
The Leapfrog Group. (2015, April). Scoring Methodology. Retrieved from Hospital Safety Score: http://www.hospitalsafetyscore.org/media/file/HospitalSafetyScore_ScoringMethodology_Spring2015_Final.pdf

Monday, June 13, 2016

Plans for #Safety2016 in Atlanta

Now that the CSP Beast has been conquered, I'm making my plans for #Safety2016 in Atlanta. Safety 2016 is the professional development conference and exhibition for the American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE)

Here's the tentative schedule of events for the Industrious Hygienist:

Saturday - June 25, 2016


Sunday - June 26, 2016

Attend the ASSE House of Delegates as the Industrial Hygiene Practice Specialty proxy.
Attend ASSE Region II party!

Monday - June 27, 2016

Session 518: Safety Excellence - The Big 5 at L'Oreal 
Session 543: Revolutionizing Risk Assessments - Oh My, Oh My, Bowties!
Session 566: A Federal OSHA Safe Patient Handling & Mobility Inspection & Citation
Session 580: Making the Fall Protection System Fit the Workplace

Tuesday - June 28, 2016

Session 605: Practicing Emergency Preparedness - The Key to a Successful Failure
Session 634: Laboratory Safety
Session 665: 3 A's of Ninja Awesomeness - Ninja-Style Back Safety and Injury Prevention

Wednesday - June 29, 2016

Session 707: Beyond the OSHA Log - Safety Management Systems for Healthcare
Session 744: How ISO 45001 Will Drive Business Excellence
Session 769: Remember the Ladies - Gender Equity for OSH Programs*

Join the Industrious Hygienist at #Safety2016

Session #769 is highlighted and underlined because I am co-presenting this session with Dr. Ilise Feitshans. We have an engaging presentation planned that will discuss the concept of gender equity and how it can be integrated into occupational safety and health programs.

Our session is being sponsored by Chubb (thank you!), the Women in Safety Engineering (WISE) Common Interest Group (thank you!), and the Industrial Hygiene Practice Specialty (thank you!).

Piper Pangolin is also coming to the conference, and we'll be roaming the expo hall for more interesting things to showcase in our Safety 2016 recap video. Last year's recap video was fun to make and will show you what to expect at Safety 2016.

A PPE vending machine at Safety 2015.

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Code Pink Hijinks

Healthcare institutions throughout the United States use a standardized color code system to communicate emergencies within the organization. Here are some examples of the color code system, which can differ from hospital to hospital depending on what state you are in.

Code Blue � medical emergency
Code Red � fire
Code Orange � hazardous material spill or incident
Code Pink � infant or child abduction
Code Yellow � bomb threat
Code Gray � combative person
Code Triage � internal or external disaster

There was a Code Pink incident this January in Arizona where a new father smuggled his baby out of the hospital by placing the baby in a shopping bag and wrapping the baby in blankets. He first tried to exit through a locked fire door, and then walked out of the main entrance of the hospital, making it back to his home with the baby. The baby was retrieved by the police and placed under protective custody in the department of child safety. Interestingly, some of the most thorough news coverage was from DailyMail UK.

Based on this incident, many hospitals in the Phoenix metro area staged their annual Code Pink drill this year with the scenario of a family member trying to remove a baby from the hospital using a shopping or tote bag, to test their staff response in the women�s and children�s units, as well as security response.

Hospitals frequently use infant abduction protection systems like Hugs� or Cuddlesor MyChild�. These infant tag systems are designed to integrate with a hospital�s existing security technology and raise an alarm if the tag is altered or if the infant moves outside of the approved pre-set perimeter.

HICSCenter.orghas developed an infant/child abduction scenario, including a planning guide, response guide, and incident command chart. The Hospital Incident Command System (HICS) differs slightly from �normal� ICS in that it is written for hospitals and includes components of continuing medical care in an emergency situation.

Some of my favorite movies and TV shows have had baby stealing as a component of the story: Willow (1988), Labyrinth (1986), and Buffy the Vampire Slayer � Season 3, Episode 6: Band Candy (1998). Not sure what that says about my movie tastes. 

In Season 3, Episode 6 (Band Candy) of Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1998), the adults of Sunnydale start behaving like teenagers after ingesting magically modified chocolate candy bars sold by the students to raise money for the marching band to get new uniforms. Yes, I was in marching band. I played the clarinet. Yes, I also sold candy and wrapping paper and a host of other things to support the band. The adults have been more or less incapacitated by demons and vampires so that the leading baddie (the Mayor of Sunnydale) can complete a tribute to a local demon named Laconis. Laconis lives in the sewers and eats babies. Buffy and her team go to the hospital to see if any babies are missing, and the staff and parents are acting like unconcerned, self-absorbed teenagers, so much so that they didn�t notice four babies being taken. The babies are rescued by Buffy after the demon is defeated and returned to the hospital.

The tribute of babies for the demon Laconis in "Band Candy" from Buffy S3 E6.

Lesson learned? Chocolate can be used for evil.

Labyrinth(1986) involves the Goblin King, Jareth, stealing the little brother of the main character, Sarah. Sarah is irritated that she�s been left home to babysit and that her little brother won�t stop crying. She wishes him away to a fantasy world ruled by Jareth and a cadre of muppet characters.  Jareth sings a song about it that�s pretty awesome. Sarah has 13 hours to solve the labyrinth before Jareth turns her brother into a goblin. Sarah ends up saving her brother at the last minute and returns to the real world.

The goblins from Labyrinth - image courtesy of muppet.wikia.com.

Lesson learned? Puppets are awesome. 

In Willow (1988), the main character Willow has become responsible for a Daikini baby found by his children by the riverside. A member of the diminutive Nelwyn people, Willow gives the baby to a disgraced Daikini warrior, Madmartigan, after Madmartigan convinces Willow that taking care of the baby would give him a reason to live and turn his life around. Not long after they part ways, Willow is dismayed to discover that Madmartigan�s child care skills were, in a word, awful. The baby, named Elora Danan, is whisked away from Madmartigan by a couple of brownies named Rool and Franjean. The brownies are working to save Elora Danan from being captured by an evil queen who wants to kill Elora to attain unmeasurable power. Willow and Madmartigan eventually team up with the brownies and lose/regain Elora Danan several times during the movie.

Lesson learned? Don�t leave an infant with unqualified caregivers. And Madmartigan is the greatest swordsman that ever lived.

To commemorate our Code Pink drill this year, I drew the following cartoon/manga of a possible Code Pink incident based on the events of Willow. 

Code Pink planning with Willow, Madmartigan, Rool, and Franjean. 

We're hard at work on our new Sock Puppet Safety videos and will share when they are completed. Thanks for your continued reading!

A close-up of the "We stole the baby!" moment since it is my favorite part of the manga:
Rool and Franjean steal Elora Danan from Madmartigan.