Needlestick Injury Study
Federal Law Slashed Needlestick Injuries, New UVA Research Shows Accidental Sticks Can Infect Healthcare Workers With Bloodborne Diseases
A federal law enacted to protect healthcare workers from being stuck by needles dramatically reduced the number of such injuries, decreasing the possibility for exposure to bloodborne pathogens, research at the University of Virginia School of Medicine has found.
The UVA researchers examined 10 years of injuries – more than 23,900
in total – from hospitals around the country. Injuries were on the rise
before 2001, when the law took effect. Needlestick injuries then
dropped by about 38 percent in 2001 and remained well below the
previous levels through 2005, the last year evaluated.
‘Very Significant’ Impact
While the researchers noted that other factors might have contributed
to the decrease, UVA researcher Elayne Kornblatt Phillips, BSN, MPH,
PhD, called the effect of the Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act
“very significant.”
“Healthcare workers are precious resources in this country and around
the world,” Phillips said. “We keep reading in the news about the
shortage of healthcare workers, especially nurses and physicians, and
those are the two groups that are most often injured by sharp
devices.”
Phillips, Director of Research at the UVA
International Healthcare Worker Safety Center, conducted the
research along with Janine C. Jagger, MPH, PhD, the center’s Director,
and Mark R. Conaway, PhD, Director of the Division of Biostatistics and
Epidemiology at the UVA School of Medicine.
Their findings appear in a letter in the Feb. 16 issue of the New
England Journal of Medicine.
About the Needlestick Legislation
The Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act mandated revisions to the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s bloodborne pathogen
standards, requiring employers to provide safer devices for at-risk
employees, review exposure-control plans annually and maintain logs of
all injuries by sharp items. It also gave frontline workers a greater
role in selecting appropriate safety devices.
Phillips noted that the UVA findings underscore the importance of
legislation that is well-crafted and well-enforced. “Even though there
were OSHA regulations that intended to do the same thing, and devices
on the market to do the same thing, we really didn’t see [the decrease]
until the legislation was passed,” she said.

