ACOEM suggests
three-pronged prevention strategy for
health care workers and employers
(Chicago, IL –
December 10, 2008) The American College
of Occupational and Environmental
Medicine (ACOEM) is urging health care
workers and their employers to follow
three basic steps this flu season to
help prevent influenza infections in the
health care workforce.
Flu shots for
employees tops the list, followed by
adherence to well-proven infection
control practices when interacting with
patients and the use of educational
programs on infection avoidance in the
workplace.
Health care workers
are at risk of influenza infection from
exposure to their patients, and 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 which 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
ACOEM President Robert R. Orford, MD.
“Employers can help this situation by
taking influenza control very seriously
and implementing comprehensive
prevention programs in the workplace.”
ACOEM suggests three
steps to help health care workers and
their employers avoid influenza as the
flu season reaches its peak months:
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 (CDC) found that as few as 41
percent of health care workers gets flu
shots each year. 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 when with
patients. These
include hand-washing practices and
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 and 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. 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 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.
For more information,
see ACOEM’s policy statement on
Seasonal Influenza Prevention in Health
Care Workers or visit the ACOEM web
site at
www.acoem.org.
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