Health and Safety Research for Health Care Workers

Noise and Stress at the health care work environment

Stress and violence at work   This project aims at better understanding and quantifying the effects of poor acoustical conditions on stress responses

Needlestick injuries

Needlestick injuries and safety needle devices
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Noise and Stress in Long Term Care Facilities

  • Noise is potentially hazardous not only to hearing, but also to normal physiological and psychological functioning.
  • The complex hospital soundscape contributes to healthcare worker stress and burnout, known risk factors for job dissatisfaction and absenteeism
  • Our ongoing study involves long term care health care workers and include evaluation of the acoustical environment as well as personal measurements of stress related markers such as salivary cortisol levels and heart rate variability

Risk Assessment and Risk Management Tool for Health Care in BC

  • Health Care Workers are exposed to chemicals through diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, cleaning, sterilization procedures, and laboratory analysis as well as through housekeeping, laundry and maintenance related activities such as painting and plumbing.
 
  • The initial phase of this study concentrates in acute care nurses' exposures to five chemicals: Cyclophosphamide and Methotraxate (drugs used for chemotherapy), Formaldehyde, Glutaraldehyde and Acetone.

Safety Needle Project

  • Injuries with sharp medical devices, such as needles and scalpels, are related to the most serious exposures to hepatitis C, hepatitis B, and HIV.
 
  • The two-phase ‘Safety Engineered Medical Devices Activation Study – The BC Experience’ was conducted in six participating hospitals in three health authorities from 2009 to 2011.
 
  • Phase 1 included audits of sharps disposal containers and Phase 2 involved conducting 45 semi-structured interviews with healthcare workers.

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