PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Incidence rate of needlestick and sharps injuries in 67 Japanese hospitals: a national surveillance study.

  • Toru Yoshikawa,
  • Koji Wada,
  • Jong Ja Lee,
  • Toshihiro Mitsuda,
  • Kiyoshi Kidouchi,
  • Hitomi Kurosu,
  • Yuji Morisawa,
  • Mayumi Aminaka,
  • Takashi Okubo,
  • Satoshi Kimura,
  • Kyoji Moriya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0077524
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 10
p. e77524

Abstract

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BackgroundDetermining incidence rates of needlestick and sharps injuries (NSIs) using data from multiple hospitals may help hospitals to compare their in-house data with national averages and thereby institute relevant measures to minimize NSIs. We aimed to determine the incidence rate of NSIs using the nationwide EPINet surveillance system.Methodology/principal findingsData were analyzed from 5,463 cases collected between April 2009 and March 2011 from 67 Japanese HIV/AIDS referral hospitals that participated in EPINet-Japan. The NSI incidence rate was calculated as the annual number of cases with NSIs per 100 occupied beds, according to the demographic characteristics of the injured person, place, timing, device, and the patients' infectious status. The NSI incidence rates according to hospital size were analyzed by a non-parametric test of trend. The mean number of cases with NSIs per 100 occupied beds per year was 4.8 (95% confidence interval, 4.1-5.6) for 25 hospitals with 399 or fewer beds, 6.7 (5.9-7.4) for 24 hospitals with 400-799 beds, and 7.6 (6.7-8.5) for 18 hospitals with 800 or more beds (p-trendConclusions/significanceThe incidence rate of NSIs tended to be higher for larger hospitals and in workers aged less than 40 years; injury occurrence was more likely to occur in places such as patient rooms and operating rooms. Application of the NSI incidence rates by hospital size, as a benchmark, could allow individual hospitals to compare their NSI incidence rates with those of other institutions, which could facilitate the development of adequate control strategies.