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Thursday, July 29, 2021
 

News Headlines

HHS extends COVID-19 PHE another 90 days

The 90 days is up on October 18, but could be extended again. HHS has promised to give states at...

AHA supports mandatory vaccinations for healthcare workers

The American Hospital Association is supporting mandatory COVID-19 vaccines for healthcare...

Healthcare leaders identify top digital transformation priorities

While the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted how huge a role technology can play in making the care...

Maybe this time we should do things a little differently…

Mac's Safety Space: it seems to me that I’ve seen a lot of annual evaluations recently that only minimally make note of organizational response to the pandemic. 

 

Healthcare Life Safety Compliance

Update SOCs for off-campus buildings as TJC targets business occupancies

Be sure your facility electronic Statement of Conditions™ (eSOC) and Basic Building...

TJC's business occupancy standards: Tips, suggestions for compliance

Just as in any other survey, remember that life safety surveyors will also be looking at...

 

Healthcare Safety Leader

What might Congress expect of OSHA's workplace violence standard?

While bills to combat workplace violence in healthcare have been filed and died in Congress before, the latest bill has passed the House and was referred to the Senate in April. It calls for OSHA to implement a workplace violence prevention standard, which the agency is already working on.

Eyewash station inspections not needed for storage areas

In a recent edition of The Joint Commission (TJC)’s Perspectives magazine, the healthcare accreditor clarified that eyewash stations don’t have to be inspected weekly for its EC.02.02.01, EP 5 standard. It also clarified that eyewash stations are not needed for storage areas where chemicals are being stored, provided the chemicals aren’t being mixed or used in that space. Furthermore, eyewash stations are not needed for chemicals classified as irritants on their safety data sheet (SDS). And finally, the clarification said that “strict compliance with ANSI eyewash standard Z358.1 is not required.”

Exempt from full-scale emergency exercise? Check revised memo

In case your emergency preparedness folks were wondering, as long as you have activated your emergency plan or are still under it because of the continuing public health emergency (PHE), you get a pass again this year on the full-scale community-based preparedness exercise required by CMS.

Fire watch is one fix for temporary problems with sprinkler coverage

Q: During construction/renovation projects in the hospital, infection prevention barriers are frequently built. We use our ILSM procedures to assess the risk of these barriers. The problem I am having relates to sprinkler coverage within the containment area. Often, the containment may extend along a wall in the corridor or an anteroom will be built in the corridor. My concern is that the anteroom or containment area in the corridor will not have sprinkler coverage because of the barrier placement. The sprinklers are outside the containment barrier.

What can be done to mitigate the risk in these temporarily unsprinklered parts of our fully sprinkled hospital? I have tried going through NFPA 13 but cannot find anything that refers to these temporary situations. Do we institute a fire watch in those unsprinklered areas? One of our project managers feels we do not need to do a fire watch if we place an extra fire extinguisher in the unsprinklered containment area or anteroom.

 

Medical Environment Update

Disease-ridden bloodsuckers

Scientists are warning that warmer, wetter weather this year will increase the number of ticks born...

21H update: August updates cover bloodborne pathogens

The latest updates to the medical and dental manuals cover information on bloodborne pathogens...

 

 

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Product Spotlight

The Complete Guide to Laboratory Safety, Fifth Edition, consolidates regulations from all relevant agencies, including OSHA, The Joint Commission, CAP, CLSI, DOT, and state health departments. This book also offers customizable policies, procedures, and checklists to avoid costly fines and enhance your compliance program.

The newest edition of this proven guide includes a brand-new chapter on laboratory safety culture, plus new content on:

 

Contact Us

Brian Ward
Editor
bward@hcpro.com


HCPro
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Middleton, MA 01949
800-650-6787
http://www.hcpro.com

 

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