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How Will You Stop Her Pain? February 2015 - Subscribe to Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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4. Needle sticks and sharps injuries are uncommon events. Nearly 400,000 hospital healthcare work- ers annually sustain a percutaneous injury. Most of these injuries occur in the perioperative setting, a particularly high-risk environment for needle stick and sharps injuries because we work for prolonged periods in the presence of large quantities of blood and potentially infectious body fluids, we frequently handle sharp devices and we coordinate the passing of those devices between the team. All of these factors put surgical teams at a much higher risk. And did you know that most sticks and sharps injuries are suffered by nurses and techs while passing, disassembling or disposing of sharps devices, rather than by the surgeons who are using them? The good news: Double gloving by itself may protect the wearer's skin from needle sticks because breaches are more likely to occur to the outer gloves than the inner gloves. That was the finding of a 24- month study, "Exploring the Benefits of Double Gloving During Surgery," which was published in the March 2012 AORN Journal and examined the effect of double gloving with inner indicator gloves on the durability of inner gloves and the detection of glove tears or perfo- rations during surgery. 5. Wearing 2 pairs of gloves will cause a dan- gerous decrease in tactile sensitivity. Yes, there might be some loss of tactile sensitivity when double gloves are worn. You can exercise some clinical discretion here. The AORN recommen- dation states that when indicated by a clinical need for high tactile 6 9 February 2015 | O U T PAT I E N TS U R G E R Y. N E T Regular glove changes during a procedure can reduce the incidence of perforation and contamination.

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