Use 3-Pronged Strategy to Protect Health Care Workers This Flu Season
With the flu season in full swing, the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine is urging health care workers and their employers to follow three basic steps to help prevent infections.
Health care workers are at a significant risk of influenza infection from exposure to their patients. In addition, patients are potentially at risk of contracting the disease when exposed to infected workers, creating a patient safety hazard. Influenza contributes to approximately 36,000 deaths annually in the United States, with mortality increasing over the last two decades as the population ages and some viruses develop genetic changes that make them resistant to vaccines and antiviral medications.
"Health care workers are particularly vulnerable to influenza, and yet far too many don't take proper steps to avoid it," said Robert R. Orford, president of ACOEM. "Employers can help this situation by taking influenza control very seriously and implementing comprehensive prevention programs in the workplace."
To help health care workers and their employers avoid influenza as the flu season reaches its peak months, ACOEM recommended the following three strategies:
- Get a flu shot.Despite their work in settings in which influenza is easily transmitted, many health care workers fail to take this basic precautionary step. A recent study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that as few as 41 percent of health care workers get a flu shot each year.
According to ACOEM, flu shots are safe, effective and highly recommended -- especially for health care workers in high-risk settings such as acute care hospitals. While flu shots should not be mandatory, ACOEM encourages employers of health care workers to do all they can to promote them, including providing flu shots free of charge and offering the shots at locations and times that are convenient to the worker. When managers support flu shot programs and provide incentives to encourage participation, vaccination rates go up.
- Adhere to good infection control practices. According to ACOEM, these practices include frequent hand washing and proper respiratory etiquette, such as covering the mouth when coughing or sneezing, using tissues for respiratory secretions and disposing of them properly. Good infection control practices can prevent the spread of influenza. However, officials said that health care workers who have had a flu shot should not assume that these simple precautions become irrelevant after they have been vaccinated.
- Stay educated. Health care employers should stress the paramount importance of good infection control practices at all times and provide strong education programs for their employees. According to ACOEM, education on prevention of respiratory virus transmission should be available in the workplace in a variety of formats for different learning styles. Sessions must be at convenient times and locations and provided in a language the worker understands. Educational sessions may be separate from, or combined with, a flu shot program. Completion of required education should be monitored and enforced by the health care facility, officials said.
January 22, 2009 Copyright 2009© LRP Publications
|