In healthcare settings where patients with TB (tuberculosis) receive care, workers exposed to TB droplet nuclei are at increased risk of TB infection. Conducting cough-inducing or aerosol-generating procedures on persons with suspected or confirmed infectious TB disease can further increase the risk of infection in workers.
Summary of requirements
Employers are required to:
- Provide respirators to each employees when such equipment is necessary to protect the health of such employees. In such cases, the employer must establish and maintain a respiratory protection program.
- Conduct a hazard assessment to determine the need for personal protective equipment (PPE), document a hazard assessment certification, and provide and ensure the use of necessary PPE, along with PPE training.
- Post signs informing employees about any hazards that are of a nature such that failure to designate them may lead to accidental illness to employees or the public, or both.
- Keep injury/illness records. Covered employers must keep injury and illness records using the OSHA Form 300 Log, the Form 300A Summary, and the Form 301 Incident Reports, or equivalent forms.
- Certify and post the annual summary of injuries/illnesses. This must be posted from February 1 through April 30.
- Submit injury and illness data electronically to OSHA or OSHA’s designee, if required, by March 2 every year, if applicable.
- Keep exposure/medical records. Employers with employees exposed to biological agents (including bacteria like tuberculosis) must keep exposure records. Exposure records must be kept for 30 years. Medical records must be kept for the duration of employment plus 30 years.
- Report to OSHA. All employers, even those who may be exempt from other recordkeeping requirements, must promptly report to OSHA all work-related: fatalities, in-patient hospitalizations, amputations, and losses of an eye.
When conducting a TB-related inspection, OSHA directive CPL 02-02-078, “Enforcement Procedures and Scheduling for Occupational Exposure to Tuberculosis,” June 30, 2015, explains that OSHA officers may evaluate whether the employer has implemented appropriate abatement measures to reduce the hazard. The directive adds that OSHA may cite under the General Duty Clause if any one of the following are found to be deficient:
- TB infection control program,
- TB risk assessment,
- Medical surveillance,
- Case management of infected employees,
- Employee education and training, and
- Engineering controls.
Directive CPL 02-02-078 summarizes some widely accepted standards of practice and refers OSHA officers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) “Guidelines for Preventing the Transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Health-Care Settings,” December 30, 2005. Employers should consult the 2005 guidelines, along with any more recent guidelines. The CDC indicates that its “Tuberculosis Screening, Testing, and Treatment of U.S. Health Care Personnel: Recommendations from the National Tuberculosis Controllers Association and CDC,” May 17, 2019, updates the recommendations for screening, testing, and treatment of U.S. healthcare personnel.
In addition, according to OSHA, healthcare employers should take specific precautions to prevent the spread of TB, including the following:
- Avoid unprotected contact with potentially infected persons. When making first contact with all individuals who may have TB, visually screen for signs and symptoms of potential TB illness.
- Obtain input from employees during the development of a hazard analysis and a TB control strategy.
- Provide training in infection control procedures. Workers should be aware of potential hazards on the job and how to prevent accidental transmission. Employers should provide training on the facility’s policies and procedures regarding TB. Train workers on TB procedures, aerosol treatments, power washing, and any other practices that could increase the risk of exposure.
- Monitor health symptoms if possible exposure to TB has occurred. Workers should monitor their health for symptoms of TB infection for 10 days following known exposure and call their state or local health department immediately if they develop any illness signs or symptoms.
- Install and properly maintain appropriate air-handling systems in healthcare facilities.
- Booths used for source control should be instantaneously exhausted so that 100 percent of airborne particles are removed.
- Place patients with suspected active TB infection in an airborne infection isolation room (AIIR).
- Use HEPA filters in general-use areas, e.g., waiting rooms and emergency rooms, when recirculating indoor air. In isolation rooms these filters can only be used as a supplemental control and are not a replacement for negative pressure ventilation.
- Use UV irradiation as an additional control where exposure to TB bacilli risk is particularly high. UV radiation cannot be considered a substitute for ventilation requirements due to the low efficacy of these systems. UV irradiation may be used on recirculating air in general-use areas.
- Implement policies and practices to minimize potential exposures. When patients with active TB are known to be admitted, airborne precautions should be implemented before arrival, upon arrival, and throughout an affected patient’s presence in the healthcare setting. These patients should be placed in an isolation room with hazard signage on the door. Avoid transporting patients outside of the isolation room unless necessary and limit the numbers of healthcare workers caring for patients and visitors allowed to see the patients. Special considerations should be employed for high-risk procedures such as cough-inducing and aerosol-generation procedures, intubation, and bronchoscopy.
- Track all healthcare workers and support staff who care for or enter the rooms of confirmed or suspected active TB patients.