Transcription of Personal Protective Equipment - Home Care and Hospice
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INFECTION PREVENTION112 Volume 33 | Number 2 Protective EquipmentMARY MCGOLDRICK, MS, RN, CRNI employee(s) with occupational exposure risk ( , reasonably anticipated skin, eye, mucous membrane, parenteral contact with blood or other potentially infectious materials that may result from the performance of the staff s duties; OSHA, 2014a) and requires the use of PPE. In 1993, the American Dental Association v. Martin decision upheld the bloodborne patho-gens standard but restricted its application to the home healthcare services industry.
February 2015 Home Healthcare Now 113 Although using PPE is im-portant, it is also essential that staff don and remove PPE in a manner that minimizes further
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