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Wednesday, 22 February 2012 13:03 |
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"Needlestick injury rates from 2001 to 2005 were well below pre-Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act rates, according to the study.
A federal law enacted to protect health care workers from being stuck by needles has reduced the number of such injuries, decreasing the possibility for exposure to bloodborne diseases, according to research conducted by the University of Virginia School of Medicine.
The Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act (NSPA) requires employers to provide safety-engineered devices to employees who are at risk for exposure to bloodborne pathogens and to let frontline workers have a say in selecting these devices.
NSPA also mandated revisions to OSHA’s bloodborne pathogens standard, 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.
To determine whether the NSPA has had an effect on the rate of needlestick injuries among hospital employees, researchers used a multihospital sharps-injury database maintained by the International Healthcare Worker Safety Center at the University of Virginia. Since 1993, a group of U.S. hospitals voluntarily contributed sharps-injury surveillance data. Researchers selected the period from 1995 through 2005, which included 23,908 injuries that occurred in 85 hospitals in 10 states. They then calculated the annual rates of injuries per 100 full-time hospital employees, as reported by the American Hospital Association."
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Wednesday, 22 February 2012 13:01 |
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In effect for six more months, until Sept. 15, 2012, are measures giving compliance assistance requests top priority and reducing penalties up to 10 percent.
OSHA announced that its temporary enforcement measures applying to fall protection on residential construction jobs will stay in place for six more months –- until Sept. 15, 2012. The key benefits they afford to contractors in this sector are having OSHA area offices give their requests for compliance assistance top priority and potentially having penalties cut by 10 percent.
Falls are the leading cause of death in the construction industry.
The temporary measures resulted from OSHA's relatively new interpretation that requirement that workers performing "residential construction" must be protected with guardrail systems, safety nets, or personal fall arrest systems or other fall protection measures allowed in 1926.501(b) unless the employer can show such protection is infeasible or would present a greater hazard. (The changes became effective in June 2011 and replaced an interpretation that had existed since 1995.) Building a home or dwelling using traditional wood frame materials and methods qualifies as "residential construction."
To read the rest of this article click here.
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Wednesday, 22 February 2012 12:59 |
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All-Lifts has an open position in their synthetic sling room, making/sewing synthetic slings. Sewing machine experience is preferred. This is a full time position.
You can contact Brian Dewey at 1-800-342-4188.
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