1 / 21

Dana Root, PT, CPE, CSPHP Regional Ergonomics Coordinator, OSHA Region 5 414.297.3315

National Emphasis Program in Nursing & Residential Care Facilities: Impact for Safe Lifting & Moving in Health Care. Dana Root, PT, CPE, CSPHP Regional Ergonomics Coordinator, OSHA Region 5 414.297.3315 r oot.dana@dol.gov.

angus
Download Presentation

Dana Root, PT, CPE, CSPHP Regional Ergonomics Coordinator, OSHA Region 5 414.297.3315

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. National Emphasis Program in Nursing & Residential Care Facilities: Impact for Safe Lifting & Moving in Health Care Dana Root, PT, CPE, CSPHP Regional Ergonomics Coordinator, OSHA Region 5 414.297.3315 root.dana@dol.gov

  2. National Emphasis Program for Nursing and Residential Care Facilities • Provide guidance to agency compliance staff • Policies and procedures for targeting and conducting nursing home inspections • Focus on the hazards associated with nursing and residential care. • BBP, STF, VWP, TB, Ergonomic resident handling stressors • Why are we here again? • In 2010 nursing and residential care facilities experienced one of the highest rates of lost workdays due to injuries and illnesses of all major American industries. • No improvement in injury rates over past 10 years

  3. National Emphasis Program for Nursing and Residential Care Facilities OSHA recommends: Manual lifting of residents be minimized or eliminated when feasible, and that mechanical support devices be used for lifting whenever possible. • October 2012 • OSHA cited three Wisconsin nursing homes from a large nursing home chain • One serious violation of OSHA’s “general duty clause” • Violation cites each facility for: • Allowing employees to perform lifting, transferring, repositioning and assisted ambulation tasks that may cause musculoskeletal disorders. 

  4. Illinois Regulations • Public Act 096-0389 HB2285 • Effective date January 1, 2010 • Restrict, to the extent feasible, manual lifting or movement • Assess handling needs of resident • Educate nurses in the identification, assessment, and control of risk to injury • Evaluate alternative ways and strategies

  5. Ergonomic Assessment: Fresh Eyes • We conduct our investigation the same way that we think you conduct yours • Goal: To look at your facility with fresh eyes • Focus your efforts to minimize/eliminate manual physical assistance by healthcare provider • Examine your policy and procedures • Self Assessment: • Calculate rates for past 3 years • Observe what you have and what you are doing • Interview staff and management • Review processes to make improvements

  6. Fresh Eyes: Policy & Procedures • Purpose and Scope of the Policy • Staff responsibilities • NHA • Unit Managers • Therapy • Resident Handlers • Resident assessment • Workplace assessment • Training requirements • Equipment requirements • Medical management

  7. Fresh Eyes: Rates • Information • OSHA Logs • Safe Lifting Policy and Procedures • Calculate the Rates • FacilityDART and Severity Rates • MSD DART and Severity Rates • RHIR and RHSR Rates • Compare 2010 to BLS average DART rates • Nursing and Residential Care Facilities: 5.6 • Resident Handling Incident Rate: 9.6 • Private Industry: 1.8

  8. RHIR & RHSR for Past Three Years • Resident Handling Incident Rate = # OF RH CASES With days away from work job transfer DAYS or Restricted days x 200,000 Resident Handling Hours worked • Resident Handling Severity Rate = (days away from work + On job transfer DAYS or Restricted days) x 200,000                     Resident Handling Hours worked

  9. OSHA 300 Log

  10. RHIR & RHSR for Past Three Years • Look at the 300 Log entries: • Who • Where occurring • When occurring • How occurring • It is not about body mechanics • Easier to figure out why injuries are occurring • Pattern: • Trend over 3 years • BLS comparison • MSD days away rate: 9.6 for 2010

  11. Fresh Eyes: Interviews Resident Handlers • Employee Issues: • Training • Staffing • Resident assessment • Communication • Equipment • Availability & storage • Slings • Battery • Workplace constraints • Injury management • Operational Issues: • SPH policy and procedures • Resident assessment process • Staffing levels • Equipment & slings • Storage • Space constraints • Training and competency • Medical management supervision Nurse and Therapy Managers

  12. Fresh Eyes: Resident Assessment OSHA recommends: Manual lifting of residents be minimized or eliminated when feasible, and that mechanical support devices be used for lifting whenever possible. • Resident assessment: • Algorithms (see page 12) • MDS: Resident Assessment Instrument • ADL Support Provided versus ADL Self-Performance • FIM: Functional Independence Measure • Develop own facility assessment tool

  13. Fresh Eyes: Resident Assessment • Tool to guide decision making • Based on • Patient’s ability • Equipment availability • Standardizes practice • Guides for planning handling tasks • “Tools not rules” • Clinical judgment still needed • Manual lifting of residents be minimized in all cases and eliminated when feasible

  14. Fresh Eyes: Resident Assessment

  15. Fresh Eyes: Resident Assessment • Functional Independence Measure (FIM) • 7 level functional assessment scale of resident's actual performance • Evaluates the amount of assistance required to perform basic life activities • Need for assistance from another person or a device • Measures what the resident actually does Independent • Complete Independence • Modified independence – requires assistive device, ….. Modified Dependence – resident expends 50% or more of the effort • Supervision (setup) – without physical contact by helper, or applies assistive device • Minimal Contact Assistance – resident expends 75% of effort 3 Moderate Assistance – resident expends between 50% to 75% effort 2 Maximal Assistance – resident expends between 25% to 50% of effort 1 Total Assistance – resident expends less that 25% of effort

  16. Fresh Eyes: Resident Assessment • Egress Test • Purpose: To facilitate the safe progression of a resident’s debut transfer through repetitions • Three repetition of sit to stand • Three steps of marching in place • Advance step and return each foot • If, during any part of the Egress Test, the resident demonstrates difficulty or need for physical assistance beyond cues and/or guarding techniques, the resident is indicated for mechanical conveyance.

  17. Fresh Eyes: The Care Plan • What is on the care plan is what the resident handler must perform • Depending on the facility policy • May take the more supportive method • Manual lifting of residents be minimized or eliminated when feasible, and that mechanical support devices be used for lifting whenever possible. • Restrict, to the extent feasible, manual lifting or movement

  18. Fresh Eyes: Equipment: • Equipment • Full Body Lifts • Floor based or ceiling • Repositioning Aids • Stand-Assist or Sit/Stand Devices • Active versus passive • Ambulation Devices • Bariatric devices • Scheduled maintenance • Slings • Sizes • Task types • Backup sling availability • By vendor • Battery • Charging location • Charging schedule

  19. Fresh Eyes: Resident Handler Focus Protect the Resident Handler Monitor resident handling injuries Track and Trend By year, by shift, by wing, by xxx Compare BLS, between shifts, departments, sites Establish a written program • Admission policy • Prevent MSD injury to resident handlers • How residents are assessed • Competent in procedures for lifting and moving residents • Appropriate equipment for the task

  20. Investigation Findings • Integrate System-wide Findings • Rates • Observations • Perspectives • Are MSD injuries occurring from manual resident handling? • RHI rates above 9.6 • Why? • What needs to be improved? • How to improve it? • Who will improve it?

  21. Resource Guides http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/ergonomics/ http://www.visn8.med.va.gov/patientsafetycenter/safePtHandling/default.asp http://www.aohp.org/About/documents/GSBeyond.pdf www.osha.gov/SLTCergonomics/index.html

More Related