Abstract
The Public Health Agency of Canada oversees the Human Pathogens and Toxins Act and Human Pathogens and Toxins Regulations, and monitors human pathogen and toxin incidents in licensed facilities to minimize exposure impact at the individual and population level. To provide an overview of confirmed laboratory exposure incidents in Canada in 2023. Confirmed exposure incident reports in 2023 were analyzed using R 4.2.2, Microsoft Excel and SAS. In 2023, 207 incident reports were received, including 63 confirmed exposure incidents that affected 85 individuals. The academic sector accounted for 50.8% (n=32) of the reported confirmed exposure incidents. Microbiology (n=33; 52.4%) was the predominant activity being performed, with the most common occurrence types being sharps-related (n=22; 27.2%) and procedure-related (n=16; 19.8%). Human interaction (n=36; 57.1%) and standard operating procedures (n=24; 38.1%) were the most frequent root causes cited, with corrective actions often directly addressing these causes. Most of the 85 affected individuals were technicians/technologists (n=55; 64.7%) and had a median of 11 years of laboratory experience. Sixty-seven human pathogens and toxins (HPTs) were implicated in the confirmed exposure incidents, with bacteria (n=36; 53.7%) being the most common biological agent type. The median time between the incident and the reporting date was six days. The number of confirmed exposure incidents increased in 2023 compared to 2022. Microbiology was most often the activity being performed at the time of exposure, and occurrence-types, root causes and HPTs implicated in 2023 mirrored those cited in 2022.
Published Version
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