Section 105325 Of Chapter 6. Safer Medical Devices From California Health And Safety Code >> Division 103. >> Part 5. >> Chapter 6.
105325
. The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the
following:
(a) In California, more than 700,000 health care workers and
professionals, such as nurses, physicians and surgeons and
housekeeping staff, are at risk of infection from bloodborne
diseases, including Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C, and Human
Immunodeficiency Virus, the causative agent of Acquired
Immunodeficiency Syndrome.
(b) Contaminated needlestick and other sharp instrument injuries
threaten the well-being of health care workers and cost health care
providers millions of dollars annually.
(c) While health care employers have implemented rigorous,
universal infection control procedures, requiring gloving and other
protective equipment, exposure to bloodborne diseases continues to be
a risk for health care workers.
(d) Medical devices, such as needles, are reviewed by the federal
Food and Drug Administration for patient safety and efficacy but are
not reviewed by any state or federal agency for worker safety.
Improved product design of medical devices, such as needles,
syringes, connectors for intravenous tubes, and vacuum blood
collection systems, could reduce the number of sharps injuries.
(e) Mechanisms for the collection and dissemination of information
will allow health facilities to better evaluate safer devices and
permit better comparisons across institutions.
(f) Improvements in device and procedure-specific injury
surveillance and information dissemination may increase market
pressure to further improve medical device product design and enhance
product evaluation.
(g) Potential savings to the health care system from preventing
exposure to bloodborne pathogens include reduced cost of followup
procedures which occur following a sharps injury, such as source and
employee testing, counseling, and prophylactic treatment. In
addition, costs related to lost work time, personnel, insurance,
possible legal problems, and workers compensation could be
diminished.
(h) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this chapter
to reduce exposure of health care workers to bloodborne diseases by
encouraging the development and use of medical devices that are
designed to assure worker safety, the safety of patients, and the
efficacy of the device.