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Hazardous Drug Exposure: Case Report Analysis From a Prospective, Multisite Study of Oncology Nurses’ Exposure in Ambulatory Settings

Christopher R. Friese, Mandy Wong, Alex Fauer, Kari Mendelsohn‐Victor, Martha Polovich, Marjorie C. McCullagh

2020Clinical journal of oncology nursing23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hazardous drug exposure is an occupational health hazard to oncology nurses. Sparse data are available regarding the frequency and characteristics of hazardous drug spills. OBJECTIVES: This article aims to describe nurses' hazardous drug exposures and use of personal protective equipment during drug spills. METHODS: The Drug Exposure Feedback and Education for Nurses' Safety study launched in March 2015. When drug spills occurred, consented RNs administering chemotherapy in ambulatory infusion settings completed brief questionnaires. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize equipment use and spill events. FINDINGS: Spills were common, despite the use of closed-system transfer devices. Over two years, 51 nurses from 12 participating academic infusion centers reported 61 unique spills. Spills commonly involved highly toxic drugs. Personal protective equipment use during drug spills was suboptimal. These foundational data reveal gaps in clinical practice.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHazardous wastePersonal protective equipmentDrugAmbulatoryMedical emergencyOccupational exposureEmergency medicineHazardEnvironmental healthPharmacologyInternal medicineWaste managementOrganic chemistryCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Infectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseEngineeringChemistrySafe Handling of Antineoplastic DrugsPatient Safety and Medication ErrorsMedication Adherence and Compliance