
Emergency Procedures
In an emergency situation involving blood or potentially infectious materials, you should
always use Universal Precautions and try to minimize your exposure by wearing
gloves, splash goggles, pocket mouth-to-mouth resuscitation masks, and other barrier
devices.
If you are exposed, however, you should:
Wash the exposed area thoroughly with soap and
running water. Use non-abrasive, antibacterial soap if possible.
If blood is splashed in the eye or mucous
membrane, flush the affected area with running water for at least 15 minutes.
- Report the exposure to your supervisor as soon as possible.
- Fill out an exposure report form, if you desire. This form will be
kept in your personnel file for 40 years so that you can document workplace exposure to
hazardous substances. This report is available from your supervisor or from OSU EHS.
- You may also go to the Student Health Center to request blood testing
or the Hepatitis B vaccination if you have not already received it.
The Student Health Center has a specific set of procedures they will follow for all
post-exposure cases. These are:
- Document the route(s) of exposure and the circumstances under which
the exposure incident occurred.
- Identify and document the source individual unless such documentation
is impossible or prohibited by law.
- Test the source individual's blood for HBV and HIV as soon as
possible after consent is obtained. If the source individual is known to be seropositive
for HBV or HIV, testing for that virus need not be done.
- Collect your blood as soon feasible, and test it after your consent
is obtained.
(If you consent to baseline blood collection, but
do not give consent at that time for HIV serological testing, your blood sample will be
kept for at least 90 days. If, within 90 days of the incident, you decide to consent to
have the baseline sample tested, such testing shall be done as soon as possible, and at no
cost to you.)
- Administer post exposure prophylaxes, when medically indicated, as
recommended by the US Public Health Service.
- Provide counseling.
- Evaluate reported illnesses.
Apart from the circumstances surrounding the exposure itself, all other findings or diagnosis by
the SHC or health care professional(s) will remain entirely confidential.
Diseases
Modes of Transmission
PPE & Other Controls
Signs & Labels
Emergencies
Vaccinations
Quiz
End of Page 
Reviewed December 2007
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