Title of article
Health care personnel compliance with standards of eye and face protection and mask usage in operating rooms
Author/Authors
Aarabi, Akram Department of Operating Room Nursing - School of Nursing and Midwifery - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Kordi, Effat BSc - Manager of Operating Room - Al-Zahra Hospital - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Farahmand, Hassan Department of Operating Room Nursing - School of Nursing and Midwifery - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Gholami, Farzaneh Department of Operating Room Nursing - School of Nursing and Midwifery - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Bakhtiari, Soheila Department of Operating Room Nursing - School of Nursing and Midwifery - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences
Pages
6
From page
59
To page
64
Abstract
Background: Personal protection equipments (PPEs) should be easily accessible to decrease contact with infecting factors and also should be used purposefully to effectively keep the health care personnel in a safe distance from the patient blood
and body fluid which can easily infect the operating rooms personnel. This study aimed to find the operating rooms' personnel compliance with standards of two PPE items, mask and eye/face protection and the effective factors on their compliance.
Methods: This was a descriptive correlative study. Sampling method was simple and 250 operating room personnel were selected. Data were collected by a questionnaire consisting of three parts; demographic characteristics and standards usage of mask and eye/face protection. Participants were divided into four groups of perfect, favorable, relatively acceptable and deficient based on their scores of their compliance with standards in the second and third parts of the questionnaire. Results: The favorable compliance with standard usage of mask and eye/face protection was 33.9% and 46.4%, respectively. Participants said that lack of mask and eye/face protection was the main effective factor for their compliance. There was no significant relationship between work place and educational degree, and the personnel's compliance with standard usage of eye/face protection and mask. Conclusion: Compliance with standard usage of mask is not acceptable and is almost in agreement with other studies. The important point is that there is no significant difference between personnel's compliance with standard usage of mask and eye/face protection in high risk and low risk environments.
Keywords
Compliance with standards , personal protection equipments , effective factors , operating room personnel
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Serial Year
2008
Record number
2419265
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