Analysis of the Needlestick Injury Prevention Program Used by the California Department of Forestry 2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Analysis of the Needlestick Injury Prevention Program in our editor.
  2. Begin with the 'Incident Number' and 'Incident Date' fields. Enter the relevant details accurately to ensure proper tracking.
  3. Fill in your 'Job Title/Classification' and 'Body Part Involved'. This information is crucial for documentation purposes.
  4. In the 'Procedure Involved' section, select all applicable procedures that led to the needlestick injury. Be thorough to provide a clear context.
  5. Describe the incident in detail under 'Description of the Incident and the Injury'. This narrative will help assess circumstances surrounding the exposure.
  6. Complete any additional fields regarding engineered sharps injury protection and whether it was activated during use.
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These injuries can be avoided by eliminating the unnecessary use of needles, using devices with safety features, and promoting education and safe work practices for handling needles and related systems. These measures should be part of a comprehensive program to prevent the transmission of bloodborne pathogens.
Whenever possible, use devices with safety features such as a safety shield on needles so that recapping is not necessary. Dispose of the needle immediately after injection. Immediately dispose of used needles in an approved sharps disposal container that is puncture-proof and leakproof.
Sharps contaminated with an infected patients blood can transmit diseases, including hepatitis B, C and human immunodeficiency virus (). Because of this transmission risk, sharps injuries can cause worry and stress to the many thousands who receive them.
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Needlestick and other sharps injuries are a serious hazard in any healthcare setting. Contact with contaminated needles, scal- pels, broken glass, and other sharps may expose healthcare workers to blood that contains pathogens which pose a grave, potentially lethal risk.
Globally, an estimated 9.144.5 % healthcare workers report at least one event of accidental needle stick or sharp injury each year. These injuries contribute to transmission of some blood borne infections like Human Immunodeficiency Virus (), Hepatitis B and C infections.

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