Objective: There is little data on sharps injuries among healthcare workers in West Africa, despite the region's high rate of Hepatitis B and HIV. The purpose of this study is to investigate healthcare workers' history of sharps injury in Liberia and Ghana.

Design: An electronic cross-sectional survey disseminated by local nursing, midwifery, physician assistant, and physician associations.

Setting: Healthcare workers in Liberia and Ghana from February to June 2022.

Participants: Participant were registered nurses, physician assistants, physicians, or midwives, and had been working in a patient care role for at least nine of the previous twelve months.

Methods: A link to the survey was texted to participants through their professional association membership lists, including nursing, midwifery, and physician assistant organizations in both Liberia and Ghana and a physician organization in Ghana only.

Results: 509 participants reported an average of 1.8 injuries per year in Liberia and 1.1 in Ghana (p=<0.01). 15.1% of healthcare workers reported three or more injuries in the past year. Liberia had a higher proportion of frequently injured workers (p=<0.01). Frequently injured workers were evenly distributed across worker types.

Conclusions: Workers in this region are vulnerable to sharps injuries. A frequently injured subset of workers likely has distinctive risk factors and would benefit from further investigation and intervention.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10543237PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.09.19.23295623DOI Listing

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