अमूर्त

LEVEL OF KNOWLEDGE ABOUT BLOOD BORNE DISEASE IN NURSES WORKING IN TERTIARY CARE HOSPITAL

Dr. Syed Yar Muhammad

Background: Blood-Borne Pathogens (BBP) Hepatitis B Virus (HBV), Hepatitis C Virus (HCV), and HIV pose a considerable infectious risk for nurses, resulting in unwanted health outcomes and psychological stress.

Objective: The study aimed to assess the level of knowledge among nurses working in a tertiary care hospital about blood-borne diseases like HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis B, C, etc.

Methods: A cross-sectional study was carried out from December 2018 to June 2019 using an interview-based questionnaire, interview was taken from 107 nurses working in the Ayub teaching Hospital, Madian Abbottabad, with a response rate of 89.16% (107/120).

Results: A total of 107 nurses participated with 91(85%) females and 16(15%) males. The nurses are of different ages with a mean of 30.14. 57(53.3%) nurses are diplomate, 10(9.3%) are graduate, 40(37.4%) are undergraduates. The majority of them are staff nurses. 91(85%) nurses correctly defined the term blood borne disease, 5(4.7%) cannot defined correctly and 11(10.3%) did not know about this definition. 80(74.8%) knew about the name and causative agents of blood-borne diseases, 13(12.1%) wrongly answered, 1(.9%) did not know about it, and 13(12.1%) are missing. 30(28.0%) correctly answered about the risk factors of blood-borne disease, 24(22.4%) wrongly answered and 53(49.5%) don’t know the risk factors of these diseases.

21(19.6%) answered that Hepatitis B is preventable. 2(1.9%) answered that Hepatitis C is preventable, 3(2.8%) answered about AIDS, 8(7.5%) answered that Hepatitis B and C both are preventable, 34(31.8%) answered that all blood borne diseases is preventable, 39(36.4%) don’t about it. After getting needle stick injury, 31(29.0%) answered that they consult to physician, 19(17.8%) answered they vaccinate themselves, 16(15%) answered for screening, 10(9.3%) answered both for vaccination and screening, 16(15.0%) said other methods and 15(14.0%) don’t know about it. 53(49.5%) answered that blood home diseases have effective treatment, 34(31.8%) answered that they are not treatable, 20(18.7%) don’t about it.

Overall 12.1% don’t know about these infections. 18.7% are in the satisfactory category, 58.9% are in good and 10.3% are in the excellent category.

Conclusion: Both the knowledge and the practice of Ayub teaching hospital’s nurses against BBP and Infection Control standards were fair. In our study, about 70% of nurses have reasonable knowledge about blood-borne infections. But 30% have inadequate knowledge about these infections. Healthcare facilities should focus on increasing nurses’ awareness of strict adherence to Infection Control standards and implement training and preventive programs to minimize the risk of needle-stick injuries. All nurses should be vaccinated against HBV.

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