Bloodborne Pathogens
Chapter 296-823, WAC |
Effective
Date: 09/01/04 |
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Your Responsibility:
To provide and make sure personal
protective equipment is used when work practices and controls
won't fully protect your employees from the risk of exposure to
blood or other potentially infectious materials
You must
WAC
296-823-15005
Provide and make sure
personal protective equipment is used when there is occupational
exposure
You must
- Provide at no cost to employees, appropriate
personal protective equipment such as:
- – Gloves
- – Gowns
- – Laboratory coats
- – Face shields or a combination of masks
and eye protection
- – Mouthpieces
- – Resuscitation bags
- – Pocket masks
- – Other ventilation devices.
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Note:
- PPE is considered "appropriate"
only if it does not permit blood or other
potentially infectious materials (OPIM) to pass through
to or reach the employee's work clothes, street clothes,
undergarments, skin, eyes, mouth, or other mucous membranes
under normal conditions of use and for
the duration of time which the protective equipment will
be used.
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You must
- Make sure that employees use appropriate
PPE.
- – In rare and extraordinary circumstances,
employees can briefly and temporarily choose not to use PPE
if, in their professional judgment, they believe that using
PPE would prevent the delivery of health care or public safety
services or pose an increased hazard to themselves
or coworkers.
- If the employee makes this judgment, you
must investigate and document to determine if changes can be
made to prevent future occurrences of the same situation
- Make sure that appropriate PPE, in sizes to
fit your employees, is readily accessible at the worksite or
issued to employees
- Make sure employees remove all PPE before
leaving the work area.
WAC
296-823-15010
Make sure gloves are worn
You must
- Make sure gloves appropriate to the situation
are worn when:
- – It can be reasonably anticipated that
the employee may have hand contact with blood, other potentially
infectious materials (OPIM), mucous membranes, or skin that
isn't intact
- – Handling or touching contaminated
items or surfaces
- – Performing vascular access procedures,
for example, drawing blood or inserting an IV.
You must
- Do the following when you are an employer
in a volunteer blood donation center and you make the judgment
that employees don't require routine use of gloves when performing
phlebotomies:
- – Periodically reevaluate your decision
not to require gloves
- – Make gloves available to all employees
who wish to use them for phlebotomy (blood drawing)
- – Don't discourage the use of gloves
for phlebotomy
- – Require that gloves be used for phlebotomy
in any of the following circumstances:
- When the employee
has a cut, scratch, or other break in the skin of his or
her hand or wrist
- When the employee judges that hand
contamination with blood may occur; for example, when performing
phlebotomy on an uncooperative individual
- When the employee is receiving training
in phlebotomy.
You must
- Make sure employees who are allergic to the
gloves that are normally provided have ready access to at least
one of the following:
WAC
296-823-15015
Make sure appropriate masks, eye protection,
and face shields are worn
You must
- Make sure either chin-length face shields
or a combination of masks and eye protection are used, whenever
splashes, spray, spatter, or droplets of blood or other potentially
infectious materials (OPIM) may be generated and eyes, nose,
or mouth contamination can be reasonably anticipated.
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Note:
- Examples of eye protection devices
include goggles and glasses with solid shields
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WAC
296-823-15020
Wear appropriate protective clothing
You must
- Make sure appropriate protective clothing
is worn when splashes to skin or clothes are reasonably anticipated.
The type and characteristics will depend upon the sort of work
being done and how much exposure is anticipated.
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Note:
- Examples of protective clothing include:
- – Gowns
- – Aprons
- – Lab coats
- – Clinic jackets
- – Similar outer garments
- – Surgical caps or hoods
- – Shoe covers or boots.
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You must
- Remove a garment as soon as feasible if blood
or other potentially infectious materials (OPIM) penetrate it.
WAC
296-823-15025
Make resuscitator devices available
You must
- Make resuscitator (emergency ventilation)
devices readily available and accessible to employees who can
reasonably be expected to perform resuscitation procedures.
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Note:
- Examples of resuscitator devices include:
- – Masks
- – Mouthpieces
- – Resuscitation bags
- – Shields/overlay barriers.
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WAC
296-823-15030
Maintain personal protective equipment
You must
- Clean, repair, replace, launder, and dispose
of personal protective equipment required by this chapter, at
no cost to the employee
- Make sure when PPE is removed, it is placed
in an appropriately designated area or container for storage,
washing, decontamination, or disposal.
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Note:
- Contaminated personal clothing is considered
PPE for the purposes of this section.
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