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- D Tandberg, K K Stewart, and D Doezema.
- Division of Emergency Medicine, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque 87131.
- Ann Emerg Med. 1991 Jan 1; 20 (1): 66-70.
Study HypothesisThere is considerable under-reporting of contaminated occupational needlestick and other sharp object injuries among emergency health care workers.PopulationA convenience sample of emergency physicians, emergency nurses, and emergency medical technicians (EMTs).MethodsA survey instrument eliciting demographic and work-related factors was developed and administered; survey items included age, sex, occupation, years in occupation, number of procedures performed per week, number of contaminated needlestick (and other "sharps") injuries recalled, and number of these injuries formally reported during the previous five years. Nonsegmented visual analog scales were used to assess eight attitudes possibly associated with nonreporting. Analysis was by analysis of variance and multiple linear regression with stepwise variable election.ResultsTwo hundred fifty-nine subjects recalled 643 contaminated exposures during the five-year study period, but only 228 (35%) were formally reported. One or more injuries occurred in 55% of EMTs compared with 72% of nurses and 80% of physicians (P less than .05). Physicians recalled a mean of 3.8 contaminated exposures, whereas nurses recalled 2.8 and EMTs recalled only 1.8 (P less than .05). Physicians formally reported a mean of 0.26 exposures, whereas EMTs reported 0.85 and nurses reported 1.25 (P less than .05). Physicians formally reported only one eighth of their injuries compared with EMTs and nurses, who each reported two thirds of these events (P less than .05). Perception of risk, occupation, years in occupation, and concern about excessive paperwork were the most powerful predictors of low reporting rate (P less than .05).ConclusionsWork-related contaminated sharp object injuries are under-reported by emergency health care workers, especially emergency physicians.
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