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Glove Selection

Glove Selection. Occupational Hazards To Health Care Workers August 1, 2002 Susan Wilburn. Why Wear Medical Gloves?. History of Medical Glove Use 1900s Halstead in surgery for nurses 1987 CDC Universal Precautions 1991 OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard. Hierarchy of Controls.

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Glove Selection

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  1. Glove Selection Occupational Hazards To Health Care Workers August 1, 2002 Susan Wilburn

  2. Why Wear Medical Gloves? History of Medical Glove Use • 1900s Halstead in surgery for nurses • 1987 CDC Universal Precautions • 1991 OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard

  3. Hierarchy of Controls • Elimination – Substitution • Engineering Controls • Administrative and Work Practice Controls • Personal Protective Equipment

  4. NIOSH Latex Allergy Alert June 1997 WARNING! Workers exposed to rubber gloves and other latex-containing products may develop allergic reactions such as skin rashes, nasal or sinus symptoms, asthma and in rare instances shock.

  5. Latex Allergy: Type I Immediate Hypersensivity • 1979: First reports in literature • 1988-1992: Latex glove use and reactions • 11.8 billion exam and 1.8 billion surgical gloves use in US • FDA reports > 1,000 systemic reactions to latex • FDA reports 15 deaths

  6. Types of Glove-Associated Reactions • Irritant Contact Dermatitis • Allergic Contact Dermatitis (Type IV Delayed Hypersensitivity) • Latex Allergy IgE-mediated response (Type I Immediate Hypersensitivity)

  7. Chemical Barrier Viral Barrier Glove Needs

  8. Glove Selection • Meeting existing standards and guidelines • Prevents illness and exacerbation of existing problems

  9. Standards and Guidelines • OSHA • CDC • NIOSH • ASTM • FDA

  10. CDC Guidelines “adequate barrier protection”

  11. OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard, 1991 • 29 CFR 1910.1030 • Gloves shall be worn . . hand contact with blood, other potentially infectious materials, mucous membranes and non-intact skin • Appropriate PPE in appropriate sizes • Hypoallergenic gloves, glove liners, powderless gloves or similar alternatives shall be readily available to those employees who are allergic to the gloves normally provided

  12. OSHA PPE Standard • 29 CFR 1910.132 and 1910.138 • Select the most appropriate glove for a particular application and determine how long it can be worn • Know the performance characteristics of the gloves relative to the specific hazard anticipated

  13. OSHA Technical Information Bulletin Potential for Allergy to Natural Rubber Latex Gloves, 1998 • Reduce unnecessary exposure to natural rubber latex protein for all workers • Choose latex gloves with lower protein • Selecting powder-free gloves offer additional benefit of reducing systemic allergic responses • Provide suitable alternatives to latex gloves

  14. NIOSH Alert

  15. Criteria for Glove Selection • In Use issues • User Preferences • Match glove to user criteria through in-use performance evaluation

  16. Criteria for Glove – In Use • Exposure to infectious organisms • Physical stress/durability (orthopoedic surgery) • Chemical resistance (drugs, disinfectants)

  17. Glove Standards • American Society for Testing & Materials (ASTM) • FDA

  18. FDA Safety Medical Devices Act • No Viral or Chemical barrier testing required • AQL Water Leak • Surgeon’s gloves = 2.5% • Exam gloves = 4 % • Proposed Powder and Protein Labeling • Powder non > 120 mg per glove • Protein maximum 1,200 mcg per glove

  19. ASTM Glove Standards • ASTM F 1671 – 97a viral penetration • ASTM F 739-96 Chemical permeation

  20. Chemical Sensitizers • Low Thiuram, Carbamates, Thiazole • Negative Modified Draize-95 • Negative patch test

  21. Glove Materials • Vinyl (poly vinyl chloride) • Polyurethane • Natural Rubber Latex (powdered or non) • Neoprene (chlorinated) • Nitrile • Elastryn • Polyisoprene

  22. Glove Performance • Permeation tests with Latex, PVC, Latex/neoprene and nitrile to Cyclophosphamide, Ara-C, vincritine, methotrexate, daunomycin • All drugs permeated all glove materials: highest permeation with PVC, lowest with Nitrile

  23. Glove Selection Best Practices • Oregon Health Division partnership • Kaiser-Permanente • Emery University • Postal Worker and Airport Personnel

  24. Oregon Strategic Plan for Reducing Occupational Dermatitis • Joint labor-management, public-private, intergovernmental partnership to eliminate latex use in food service based on occupational dermatitis worker’s comp claims • Oregon Health Division Occ & Enviro • Liberty Northwest Insurance • Oregon Restaurant Association • UFCW, Local 555 • County health departments environmental services in 5 counties

  25. Kaiser-Permanente Eliminated latex and vinyl exam gloves; substitute with Nitrile Emery University Eliminated latex and saved $ on workers’ compensation Hospital Best Practices

  26. Purchasing Products for Safety • Management commitment • Worker involvement • Health and safety committee involved in surveillance & glove selection decision; work with purchasing to set criteria for RFP to include independent testing of viral and chemical barrier

  27. Resources • www.nursingworld.org/dlrwa/osh • www.sustainablehospitals.org • www.cdc.gov/niosh • www.OSHA.gov

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