1 / 16

CCS Bloodborne Pathogen Policy, section 1016.0305

CCS Bloodborne Pathogen Policy, section 1016.0305. OSHA Requirement for all employees every school year and for all new employees . Location.

jeneil
Download Presentation

CCS Bloodborne Pathogen Policy, section 1016.0305

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. CCS Bloodborne Pathogen Policy, section 1016.0305 OSHA Requirement for all employees every school year and for all new employees

  2. Location • The Bloodborne Pathogen Policy can be found in section 1016.0305 in the CCS Policy Manual. The manual is located in the principal’s office or media center in your school. A copy of the policy is also in the Health Room.

  3. Standard Precautions • The concept of standard precautions assumes each person’s body fluids are infectious • Employees are to use specific protective equipment called personal protective equipment as needed (gloves, masks, gown, protective eyewear

  4. Blood or Body Fluid Exposure • Use resuscitation devices when performing mouth to mouth • Skin exposure by needle or blood/body fluid – wash immediately with soap and water, notify school nurse, notify principal within 24 hours

  5. Location • The Bloodborne Pathogen Policy can be found in section 1016.0305 in the CCS Policy Manual. The manual is located in the principal’s office or media center in your school. A copy of the policy is also in the Health Room.

  6. Standard Precautions • The concept of standard precautions assumes each person’s body fluids are infectious • Employees are to use specific protective equipment called personal protective equipment as needed (gloves, masks, gown, protective eyewear

  7. Blood or Body Fluid Exposure • Use resuscitation devices when performing mouth to mouth • Skin exposure by needle or blood/body fluid – wash immediately with soap and water, notify school nurse, notify principal within 24 hours

  8. Student Safety:Communicable Disease Section 1000 Policy 1016.06070101 In the Craven County School Policy Manual

  9. Universal Precautions are required to be used by all employees • The Health Director is responsible for determining which school personnel will be informed of the identity of a student with AIDS or HIV infection or other communicable disease required to be reported

  10. Confidentiality • Any employee informed of a disease/condition or who becomes aware must maintain confidentiality and may not share that information unless specifically permitted to do so by the health director, parent/legal guardian

  11. Non-Reportable Diseases/Conditions • Chickenpox: exclude for 5 days after rash appears or until all blisters have scabs • Conjunctivitis (pink eye): refer to school nurse for evaluation • Impetigo: exclude if more than 3 or 4 sores until treated • Ringworm: scalp-will be referred to health care provider; skin-cover while in school, refer to the school nurse • Lice: exclusion will be the decision of the school nurse

  12. Diabetes A group of metabolic diseases characterized by high blood sugar resulting in defects insulin secretion, insulin action or both

  13. Symptoms of High Blood Sugar • Frequent urination • Extreme hunger • Extreme fatigue • Unusual thirst • Irritability • Blurred vision • If a child has an insulin pump this is an extreme emergency

  14. Signs of Low Blood Sugar • Hunger • Shakiness • Dizziness • Sweatiness • Fast heartbeat • Drowsiness • Feeling irritable, sad or angry • Nervousness • Pallor

  15. More Signs of Low Blood Sugar • Feeling sleepy • Being stubborn • Lack of coordination • Tingling or numbness of the tongue • Personality change • Passing out • Seizure

  16. Additional Information • Full length PowerPoint presentations are located in iWeb under Employee Wellness tab

More Related