Authors
JL Smith, R Banerjee, DR Linkin, EP Schwab, P Saberi, M Lanzi
Publication date
2021/1/1
Journal
Occupational Medicine
Volume
71
Issue
1
Pages
20-24
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Background
Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is recommended to start within hours of needlestick injuries (NSIs) among healthcare workers (HCWs). Delays associated with awaiting the results of testing from the source patient (whose blood was involved in the NSI) can lead to psychological consequences for the exposed HCW as well as symptomatic toxicities from empiric PEP.
Aims
After developing a ‘stat’ (immediate) workflow that prioritized phlebotomy and resulting of source patient bloodwork for immediate handling and processing, we retrospectively investigated whether our new workflow had (i) decreased HIV order-result interval times for source patient HIV bloodwork and (ii) decreased the frequency of HIV PEP prescriptions being dispensed to exposed HCWs.
Methods
We retrospectively analysed NSI …
Total citations
Scholar articles
JL Smith, R Banerjee, DR Linkin, EP Schwab, P Saberi… - Occupational Medicine, 2021