Sharp injuries and their determinants among health care workers at first-level care facilities in Sindh Province, Pakistan

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Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To assess the rate and determinants of sharp injuries during the previous 6 months among health care workers at first-level care facilities in two districts of Pakistan. METHODS: Cross-sectional survey at public, general practitioners and non-licensed private practitioners selected through stratified random sampling. At each facility, we interviewed a prescriber and a dispenserinjection provider about knowledge of bloodborne pathogens transmission and preventive practices, risk perception, and use of precautions and sharp injuries received during the previous 6 months. Multivariable Poisson regression was used to assess the factors associated with the number of sharp injuries. RESULTS: Fifty-four percentage of the 233 workers had at least one injury during the previous 6 months. The overall rate of sharp injuries per person per year was 3.7; among non-physician prescribers (9%), it was 4.3; among dispensers (69%), it was 3.7, and among physicians (18%), it was 2.1. In the multivariable model, work experience, risk perception and type of health care worker were significantly associated with receiving sharp injuries during the previous 6 months. In the model including dispensers only, a higher knowledge score was associated with fewer sharp injuries, while perceived severity of disease and lack of professional qualification were associated with more. CONCLUSIONS: Sharp injuries are common in Pakistan. Better knowledge about modes of bloodborne pathogen transmission and professional qualification may reduce their incidence. © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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APA

Janjua, N. Z., Khan, M. I., & Mahmood, B. (2010). Sharp injuries and their determinants among health care workers at first-level care facilities in Sindh Province, Pakistan. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 15(10), 1244–1251. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3156.2010.02610.x

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