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- From: ndallen@r-node.gts.org (Nigel Allen)
- Subject: Workplace Tuberculosis
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.090030.15965@r-node.gts.org>
- Organization: Echo Beach, Toronto
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 09:00:30 GMT
- Lines: 76
-
- Here is a press release from the American Federation of State,
- County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME).
-
- AFSCME Leads Unions In Petition For Workplace Tuberculosis Standard
- To: National Desk, Health Writers
- Contact: Sondra Dimond, 202-429-1130, or
- Jordan Barab, 202-429-1232, both of the American
- Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
-
- WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 -- The American Federation of State,
- County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), AFL-CIO, led 11 other
- unions and the AFL-CIO in requesting the immediate issuance of
- tuberculosis enforcement guidelines that would enable the
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to inspect
- workplaces and enforce strict TB controls in health care and other
- workplaces nationwide.
- "We are calling on the Secretary of Labor to take strong and rapid
- actions through the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to
- protect America's workforce from the return of an old, almost
- forgotten killer disease called tuberculosis," said AFSCME
- International President Gerald W. McEntee. "If this nation is to
- successfully fight this fatal disease, pressure needs to be put on
- public officials to make sure that the caregivers can do their jobs
- on the front lines without fear for their own health."
- The unions, representing more than 1 million health care,
- criminal justice and other affected workers throughout the country,
- called for guidelines to protect workers in high-risk settings from
- exposure to tuberculosis through close, repeated, prolonged indoor
- contact with the disease.
- "While we realize that this administration's days are numbered,
- this is an action that is urgently needed and can be implemented
- immediately," said McEntee. "We fully expect that the Clinton
- administration will begin work on a full TB standard soon after
- taking office."
- The proposed guidelines, would be based on Centers for Disease
- Control (CDC) tuberculosis guidelines issued in 1990 and on already
- existing OSHA TB enforcement guidelines issued by OSHA Region II
- which covers New York and New England. California OSHA is working on
- a similar document.
- Under the proposed guidelines, employers would be required to
- develop a written TB exposure control plan. In addition, all
- employees in covered facilities must be offered a skin test free of
- charge, on work time, and at a time and place convenient to the
- employees with test results read and analyzed by a trained
- professional.
- Employee training would include education in areas including the
- signs and symptoms of TB infection as well as the modes of
- transmission; the ways of preventing transmission and information on
- how to recognize tasks or areas that might increase the risk of
- occupational exposure. Employee education would show the link
- between HIV infection and TB and the facility's policy on providing
- alternative work assignments to those who may be at increased risk of
- acquiring the disease.
- The proposed TB guidelines would also require exposure control
- through management for patients, clients or inmates in facilities
- such as hospitals, prisons and nursing homes where there are members
- of high-risk groups who have a long duration of stay. Staff should
- be trained to identify TB symptoms and instructed to isolate
- suspected cases of active TB in homeless shelters, hospital waiting
- rooms or other workplaces where infectious persons may collect on an
- outpatient, emergency or ambulatory care basis.
- In the event of an outbreak of tuberculosis in a work setting
- where standard TB controls and work practices are not required, the
- proposed TB standard would require the employer to develop a response
- plan that includes the identification and notification of all
- potentially exposed individuals; a training and information session
- covering the outbreaks and the risk of infection; offer all affected
- individuals free TB screening; and implementation of any controls
- that can prevent further exposure to the disease.
- The unions called upon OSHA and the Department of Health and Human
- Services (HHS) to issue a comprehensive joint notice on protection
- against occupational exposure to tuberculosis as soon as possible.
- This would form the basis of a nationwide OSHA compliance document to
- be effective until the final standard takes effect.
- -30-
- --
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