west china medical publishers
Keyword
  • Title
  • Author
  • Keyword
  • Abstract
Advance search
Advance search

Search

find Keyword "Occupational health" 2 results
  • Protection Education towards Needle Stick Injuries among Nursing Students in China: A Meta-Analysis

    Objective To systematically evaluate the effect of occupational protection education towards needle stick injuries among nursing students in China. Methods A computerized literature searching was carried out from October 2002 to October 2012 in following databases: PubMed, CNKI, WanFang Data and VIP, so as to collect all controlled studies about the effects of preventing needle stick injuries between students who had occupational protection education and those who had not. Two reviewers independently screened the studies according to the inclusive and exclusive criteria, extracted the data, and assessed the quality. Then RevMan 5.0 software was used for meta-analysis. Results A total of 10 studies involving 2 197 nursing students were included. Ten studies indicated that protection education could reduce the incidence of needle stick injuries by 33%; 3 studies indicated that protection education could increase the awareness rate of protective knowledge by 52%; and 4 studies indicated that protection education could increase the correct treatment rate after injuries by 61%. Conclusion Occupational protection education before internship is effective to prevent needle stick injuries among nursing students. However, because of the limitation of this study, more high quality studies are needed to further confirm its effectiveness and to provide targeted advices for formulating preventive measures.

    Release date: Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • A Current Situation Survey on Sharp Injury in 840 Medical Workers

    Objective To survey the current situation of the sharp injury in medical workers, and to provide scientific evidence for the prevention and protection of sharp injury. Methods Through applying the questionnaire of sharp injuries designed by Zhongshan Hospital, Shanghai Fudan University, 10% of the workers in all departments of West China Hospital of Sichuan University were selected as respondents according to their job categories. The main contents of the survey included the general information of respondents, reporting after sharp injuries, training participation, and the exposure sources, operations, premises and equipments related to sharp injuries over the past one year.Results Of 840 questionnaires distributed, 100% were valid. The ratio of male was 23% while the female was 72%. There were 50.20% of all respondents who once got injured, and 75% of the respondents having the history of sharp injury worked less than 10 years. The nurses, house keepers and physicians were in the top three positions of suffering from sharp injury; and the operating room was ranked as the highest risk department for sharp injuries. The known haematogenous exposure sources were 69 cases of hepatitis B, 19 syphilis, 6 hepatitis C, and 3 HIV. There were 62% of the respondents who had ever attended related training, and only 11.61% of the injured respondents reported their sharp injuries. Conclusion The incidence rate of the sharp injury is high, but the report rate is low. The operating room is the high risk department, and nurses, house keepers, and physicians are the high risk population for sharp injuries. The prevention and protection and training for sharp injury in target departments and population should be strengthened.

    Release date:2016-09-07 11:06 Export PDF Favorites Scan
1 pages Previous 1 Next

Format

Content