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Commentary: the importance of education and vaccination in reducing the risk of hepatitis infection among nursing students

Jayne Cutter

International Nursing Review, Volume: 58, Pages: 186 - 187

Swansea University Author: Jayne Cutter

Abstract

Background: Occupational acquisition of blood-borne viral infection has been reported following contact with blood and body fluids. Nursing students may be at particular risk because of their inexperience. Standard precautions, vaccination against hepatitis B vaccination and appropriate post-exposur...

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Published in: International Nursing Review
Published: Wiley Blackwell 2011
Online Access: http://INRedoffice@wiley.com
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa10678
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first_indexed 2013-07-23T12:04:03Z
last_indexed 2018-03-01T13:38:48Z
id cronfa10678
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spelling 2018-03-01T11:02:55.4933361 v2 10678 2012-04-19 Commentary: the importance of education and vaccination in reducing the risk of hepatitis infection among nursing students 3fe2e541e1d50a75aa2f9ce8c1052ed5 Jayne Cutter Jayne Cutter true false 2012-04-19 HNU Background: Occupational acquisition of blood-borne viral infection has been reported following contact with blood and body fluids. Nursing students may be at particular risk because of their inexperience. Standard precautions, vaccination against hepatitis B vaccination and appropriate post-exposure prophylaxis will reduce the risk of infection in the event of an advers exposure to blood and body fluids.Aim: Yamazhan et al. who explored nursing students’ knowledge on hepatitis together with their immunization status. This commentary discusses the findings of this study Evaluation: Universities in Turkey encourage the uptake of hepatitis B vaccination students, suggesting a high commitment to reducing the risk of this infection. However, knowledge of hepatitis, its mode of transmission and risk of infection following adverseexposure to blood and body fluids is variable between universities and needs to be enhanced to improve practice and fully protect nursing students from infection Implications: All universities in Turkey should deliver a standardized education package to ensure that nursing students have a sound knowledge of all blood-borne infections. Vaccination programmes must continue to ensure consistent protection aginst hepatitis B. Journal Article International Nursing Review 58 186 187 Wiley Blackwell Education, Hepatitis, Hepatitis B Vaccination, Knowledge, Sharps’ Injuries 30 6 2011 2011-06-30 INRedoffice@wiley.com COLLEGE NANME Nursing COLLEGE CODE HNU Swansea University 2018-03-01T11:02:55.4933361 2012-04-19T14:45:37.1993906 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Nursing Jayne Cutter 1
title Commentary: the importance of education and vaccination in reducing the risk of hepatitis infection among nursing students
spellingShingle Commentary: the importance of education and vaccination in reducing the risk of hepatitis infection among nursing students
Jayne Cutter
title_short Commentary: the importance of education and vaccination in reducing the risk of hepatitis infection among nursing students
title_full Commentary: the importance of education and vaccination in reducing the risk of hepatitis infection among nursing students
title_fullStr Commentary: the importance of education and vaccination in reducing the risk of hepatitis infection among nursing students
title_full_unstemmed Commentary: the importance of education and vaccination in reducing the risk of hepatitis infection among nursing students
title_sort Commentary: the importance of education and vaccination in reducing the risk of hepatitis infection among nursing students
author_id_str_mv 3fe2e541e1d50a75aa2f9ce8c1052ed5
author_id_fullname_str_mv 3fe2e541e1d50a75aa2f9ce8c1052ed5_***_Jayne Cutter
author Jayne Cutter
author2 Jayne Cutter
format Journal article
container_title International Nursing Review
container_volume 58
container_start_page 186
publishDate 2011
institution Swansea University
publisher Wiley Blackwell
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Health and Social Care - Nursing{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Nursing
url INRedoffice@wiley.com
document_store_str 0
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description Background: Occupational acquisition of blood-borne viral infection has been reported following contact with blood and body fluids. Nursing students may be at particular risk because of their inexperience. Standard precautions, vaccination against hepatitis B vaccination and appropriate post-exposure prophylaxis will reduce the risk of infection in the event of an advers exposure to blood and body fluids.Aim: Yamazhan et al. who explored nursing students’ knowledge on hepatitis together with their immunization status. This commentary discusses the findings of this study Evaluation: Universities in Turkey encourage the uptake of hepatitis B vaccination students, suggesting a high commitment to reducing the risk of this infection. However, knowledge of hepatitis, its mode of transmission and risk of infection following adverseexposure to blood and body fluids is variable between universities and needs to be enhanced to improve practice and fully protect nursing students from infection Implications: All universities in Turkey should deliver a standardized education package to ensure that nursing students have a sound knowledge of all blood-borne infections. Vaccination programmes must continue to ensure consistent protection aginst hepatitis B.
published_date 2011-06-30T03:12:08Z
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