Abstract

BackgroundHealthcare workers (HCWs) are at risk of bloodborne infections from sharp instrument injuries and skin and mucous membrane exposures to contaminated blood and body fluids (BBF). While these have clinical and occupational health implications, little is known about BBF exposure and its reporting pattern in South African primary healthcare (PHC). The aim of this study was to determine the rate of BBF exposure, the extent of reporting and the reasons for not reporting among HCWs in PHC facilities in Johannesburg, South Africa.MethodsIn a cross-sectional study involving 444 participants, an 18-item, self-administered questionnaire was used to collect information on socio-demographic characteristics, HCWs’ exposures to BBF in the last year, whether the exposure was reported and the reasons for not reporting. Analysis included descriptive statistics and chi-square test.ResultsMost participants were nurses (87.4%) and female (88.1%). About a quarter of participants (112) reported having at least one BBF exposure in the last year. Overall, there were 355 exposures, resulting in 0.8 BBF exposure per HCW per year. Of these exposures, 291 (82.0%) were not reported. Common reasons for not reporting include lack of time (42.72%), perception that the source patient was at low risk for human immunodeficiency virus (24.7%) and concerns about confidentiality (22.5%). Blood and body fluids exposures involving nurses (p < 0.001), sharp instrument (p < 0.001) and HCWs aged < 50 years (p = 0.02) were significantly more likely to be reported.ConclusionThis study found a high rate of underreporting of BBF exposures among HCWs in PHC facilities in Johannesburg, suggesting an urgent need for interventions to improve reporting.

Highlights

  • Healthcare workers (HCWs) are at risk of many bloodborne infections following injuries with sharp instruments and exposure of mucous membrane and non-intact skin to contaminated blood and body fluids (BBF)

  • Interventions aimed at addressing the low rate of reporting need to take cognisance of reasons such as lack of time, lack of confidentiality and low-risk perceptions

  • HCWs need to be trained on objective risk assessment, appropriate clinical response and prompt reporting procedures after BBF exposures

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Summary

Introduction

Healthcare workers (HCWs) are at risk of many bloodborne infections following injuries with sharp instruments and exposure of mucous membrane and non-intact skin to contaminated blood and body fluids (BBF). Healthcare workers (HCWs) are at risk of bloodborne infections from sharp instrument injuries and skin and mucous membrane exposures to contaminated blood and body fluids (BBF). While these have clinical and occupational health implications, little is known about BBF exposure and its reporting pattern in South African primary healthcare (PHC). The aim of this study was to determine the rate of BBF exposure, the extent of reporting and the reasons for not reporting among HCWs in PHC facilities in Johannesburg, South Africa

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