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EM Clerkship

Occupational Exposures

EM Clerkship

Zack Olson, MD ; Mike Estephan, MD ; Maddie Watts, MD

Health & Fitness, Science, Education, Medicine, Life Sciences

4.9 • 816 Ratings

🗓️ 17 June 2018

⏱️ 10 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary


The only chief complaint that you are guaranteed to eventually have to manage in a colleague



Respiratory Exposures



* Meningococcus​ (meningococcemia, meningitis, etc)* Give prophylaxis (ceftriaxone) if…* Intubated a pt without a mask* Suctioned a pt without a mask* Performed mouth to mouth resuscitation* Tuberculosis​ * CDC recommends testing if exposed* Treat if positive* CDC recommends prophylaxis in..* Little children, HIV positive, immunosuppressed



Cutaneous Exposures (Broken Skin, Mucous Membranes, Needle Stick)



* Hepatitis B​* Test source patient* If positive, 1-30% risk of transmission with needle stick exposure* (Mucous membrane/broken skin exposures are much lower risk)* Test exposed colleague for anti-HepB surface antibody level* If source patient is positive and coworker is not fully immunized…* Treatment * Hep B Vaccine* Hep B Immunoglobulin* Hepatitis C​* Test source patient* If positive, 2% risk of transmission with needle stick exposure * (Mucous membrane/broken skin exposures are much lower risk)* Get baseline hepatic function labs (LFTs) in coworker* Follow-up on outpatient basis, no prophylaxis available* HIV​* Test source patient with rapid HIV test* If positive, 1/300 risk of transmission with needle stick exposure* Transmission risk increases if: bloody exposure, large needle bore* (Mucous membrane/broken skin exposures are much lower risk)* Generally recommend prophylaxis if source is positive* Prophylaxis is potentially curative if given at exposure* Counsel on safe sex practices* Counsel on common treatment side effects* GI symptoms, headaches, fatigue



Additional Reading HIV Occupational Exposure Guidelines (US Public Health Service)

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, med students.

0:03.8

My name is Zach Olson, and thank you for downloading this week's episode of the EM Clerkship Podcast.

0:12.6

Here's this week's case.

0:19.6

Okay, this is Mr. Whitaker. He's found on the street down and Pastorby called in.

0:25.6

He's ETOH admitted, ETOH, and he was a little bit low on the blood pressure. We did start

0:33.6

aligning. No medical history, no meds, no allergies, nothing really in the way of complaints.

0:40.9

As a side note, this is going to be a finger stick on me. So, yeah, we got bumped by a car where we

0:47.9

are on the side of the road. And yeah, I have a pretty good finger stick. It was an 18 gauge needle

0:52.8

right into my middle finger. So, so I'm pretty good finger stick. It was an 18-gauge needle right into my middle finger.

0:57.4

So I'm also your patient today.

1:01.8

And I have the infectious disease supervisor on the way.

1:03.2

Yeah.

1:04.9

You all me in one?

1:05.7

Okay.

1:07.3

Thank you.

1:10.1

All right.

1:11.8

So a natal stick.

1:12.8

These do happen. When patients have any sort of occupational exposure and we're going to focus on respiratory

1:21.0

needle sticks, mucus membrane and broken skin exposures today, they're going to come to the

1:26.6

emergency department. And you're not only going to come to the emergency department.

1:27.5

And you're not only going to have to follow the occupational exposure algorithm

1:33.4

protocol that we're going to go through, but you're also going to have to counsel another

...

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