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Introduced Version House Bill 4298 History

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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted


H. B. 4298


(By Delegates Hatfield, Leach, Rowe,
Spencer, Kelley, Perdue and L. Smith)
[Introduced January 31, 2000; referred to the
Committee on Government Organization then Finance.]



A BILL to amend chapter sixteen of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, by adding thereto a new article, designated article thirty-six, relating to creating a needlestick injury prevention program in hospitals and nursing homes, including those staffed by public employees; requiring the proposal of rules; creating a needlestick injury prevention advisory committee; specifying requirements; providing exception; and outlining responsibilities of the director of the division of health.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That chapter sixteen of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be amended by adding thereto a new article, designated article thirty-six, to read as follows:
ARTICLE 36. NEEDLESTICK INJURY PREVENTION.
§16-36-1. Definitions.

As used in this article:
(1) "Director" means the director of the division of health;
(2) "Engineering controls" includes sharps prevention technology including, but not limited to, systems not using needles and needles with engineered sharps injury protection;
(3) "Facility" means every hospital licensed under the provisions of article five-b of this chapter, every nursing home licensed under the provisions of article five-c of this chapter, all hospitals and nursing homes operated by the state or any agency of the state and all hospitals and nursing homes which are staffed, in whole or in part, by public employees;
(4) "Health care worker" means a person working in a hospital or nursing home; and
(5) "Needlestick injury" means the parenteral introduction into the body of a health care worker of blood or other potentially infectious material by a hollow-bore needle or sharp instrument, including, but not limited to, needles, lancets, scalpels and contaminated broken glass during the performance of duties by the worker.
§16-36-2. Needlestick injury prevention rules.
(a) The director of the division of health shall propose rules for legislative approval in accordance with the provisions of article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code to require the use of devices that minimize the risk of needlestick and sharps injuries to health care workers. In developing the rules the director shall take into consideration the then current guidelines of the occupational safety and health administration relating to prevention of needlestick and sharps injuries.
(b) The director with the concurrence of the advisory committee shall propose rules for legislative approval in accordance with the provisions of article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code to which the facility must adhere, to reduce needlestick and sharps injuries or exposure incidents including, but not limited to, training, education and other measures to increase health care worker participation in Hepatitis B immunizations programs.
(c) The director, with the concurrence of the advisory committee, shall prepare and maintain a list of existing systems not using needles and needles and sharps with engineered injury protections. The director shall make the list available to assist employers in complying with the requirements of the standards adopted in accordance with this article.
§16-36-3. Needlestick injury prevention advisory committee.
(a) There is established a needlestick injury prevention advisory committee which shall approve of all rules before the director of the division of health submits them to the secretary of state in accordance with section five, article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code and, if changed, before the director submits them to the legislative rule-making review committee.
(b) The committee shall meet at least four times a year for the initial two years after the effective date of this article and on the call of the secretary of the department of health and human resources after that. The secretary serves as the chair and shall appoint thirteen members, one representing each of the following groups:
(1) A representative of the health insurance industry;
(2) The commissioner of the bureau of employment programs, or his or her designee from the division of workers' compensation;
(3) Five nurses who work primarily providing direct patient care in a hospital or nursing home, at least one of which is employed in a state operated facility;
(4) A phlebotomist employed in a hospital or nursing home;
(5) Two administrators of different hospitals operating within the state;
(6) A director of nursing employed in a nursing home within the state;
(7) A licensed physician practicing in the state; and
(8) An administrator of a nursing home operating within the state.
(c) Members of the committee serve without compensation. Each member shall be reimbursed for actual and necessary expenses incurred in attending meetings of the committee, which may not exceed the amount paid to members of the Legislature for their interim duties as recommended by the citizens legislative compensation commission and authorized by law for each day or portion of a day engaged in the discharge of their official duties.
(d) A majority of all members constitutes a quorum for the transaction of all business. Members serve for two-year terms and may not serve for more than two consecutive terms.
§16-36-4. Needlestick injury prevention requirements.
(a) A facility must, as a part of the facility's procedures for injury prevention, ensure the provision of services to individuals through the use of hollow-bore needle devices or other technology known to minimize the risk of needlestick injury to health care workers. The determination of those policies and procedures shall be consistent with the rules promulgated under this article.
(b) As required by this article, sharp injury prevention technology must be included as engineering or work practice controls, except in cases where the facility or other appropriate party can demonstrate circumstances in which the technology does not promote employee or patient safety or interferes with a medical procedure. Those circumstances shall be specified by the facility and shall include, but not be limited to, circumstances where the technology is medically contraindicated or not more effective than alternative measures used by the facility to prevent exposure incidents.
(c) A requirement that written exposure control plans be developed that include an effective procedure for identifying and selecting existing sharps prevention technology of the type specified in rules promulgated under this article.
(d) A requirement that information concerning exposure incidents be recorded in a sharps injury log, to be kept within the facility and reported annually to the director. Information recorded in the log shall contain, at a minimum:
(1) The date and time of the exposure incident;
(2) The type and brand of sharp involved in the incident; and
(3) A description of the exposure incident which shall at a minimum include:
(A) The job classification of the exposed worker;
(B) The department or work area where the exposure incident occurred;
(C) The procedure that the exposed worker was performing at the time of the incident;
(D) How the incident occurred;
(E) The body part involved in the exposure incident;
(F) If the sharp had engineered sharps injury protection, whether the protective mechanism was activated and whether the injury occurred before the protective mechanism was activated, during activation of the mechanism or after activation of the mechanism, if applicable;
(G) If the sharp had no engineered sharps injury protection, the injured employee's opinion as to whether and how such a mechanism could have prevented the injury, as well as the basis for the opinion; and
(H) The employee's opinion about whether any other engineering, administrative or work practice control could have prevented the injury, as well as the basis for the opinion.
(e) The log shall be used as the basis for continuing quality improvement in reducing needlestick and sharps injuries through the provision of education and procurement of improved products.
(f) The log shall be submitted each year to the director of the division of health.
(g) Written exposure control plans shall be updated when necessary to reflect progress in implementing the sharp prevention technology specified in rules promulgated under this article.
§16-36-5. Exception.
Until the first day of July, two thousand three, drugs and biologics regulated by the food and drug administration whose packaging, on the effective date of this article, includes needles and syringes are considered to meet any standards promulgated under this article.


NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to implement a needlestick injury prevention program in hospitals and nursing homes. The program would provide protection to employees in the facilities, some of which are public employees.

This article is new; therefore, strike-throughs and underscoring have been omitted.
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