Needlestick jabs: Law enforcement officers at risk too
When you think of workers getting stuck by a contaminated needlestick, you think of healthcare. Right? Well, a recent NIOSH fact sheet argues that you also need to picture law enforcement officers. That’s because they’re at risk of these incidents when they search people, property, vehicles, or homes!
Syringes and needles are not the only sharps to worry about, however. Other sharps include lancets, scalpels, and auto-injectors. The thing is, contaminated needlesticks/sharps injuries can infect officers with viruses. These include hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), HIV, and others.
Is it reasonably anticipated that your law enforcement officers will have contact with blood or other potentially infectious materials (OPIM) as part of their jobs? If so, they have what OSHA calls “occupational exposure.” That includes reasonably anticipated incidents involving contaminated needlesticks or other contaminated sharps as part of the duties of an officer, the subject of the latest fact sheet.
Does OSHA’s BBP standard cover law enforcement?
That's a trick question! The Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act) only covers the private sector. There’s a gap in coverage for the public sector workers like law enforcement officers employed by a municipality or state agency. That means federal OSHA does not regulate the Bloodborne Pathogens (BBP) standard at 29 CFR 1910.1030 for these officers.
However, many states have filled that gap in one of two ways:
- About half the states are considered OSHA “state-plan” states. That means they must be equivalent to or more stringent than federal OSHA for the public sector OR both the public and private sectors. These state-plan states have regulations identical to, similar to, or tougher than the federal Bloodborne Pathogens standard.
- Some of the remaining non-state-plan states proactively filled the gap for the public sector. They adopted OSHA regulations like 1910.1030 under state laws and regulations, or otherwise created their own worker safety and health laws and regulations related to hazards like bloodborne pathogens.
If your state has bloodborne pathogens laws and regulations, it’s important to meet them if you have officers (or any workers) with occupational exposure. Note that occupational exposure is not the same thing as an exposure incident. An exposure incident is actual contact with blood or OPIM. Whereas occupational exposure is reasonably anticipated contact as part of the job duties.
NIOSH offers guidance for law enforcement
Regardless whether your officers are protected by bloodborne pathogens laws and regulations, NIOSH’s fact sheet (DHHS (NIOSH) Publication No. 2025-101) provides tips and best practices specific to the risks to law enforcement. For example, NIOSH suggests that officers complete training on:
- Search techniques,
- Evidence collection methods,
- Use and removal of personal protective equipment (PPE), and
- Reporting work injuries and illnesses.
Some ways officers can keep safe include, but are not limited to:
- Getting HBV vaccination,
- Wearing gloves while performing searches, and considering gloves with puncture resistance (such as those that meet ASTM Standard F2878-19),
- Asking a suspect if they have any sharp objects BEFORE making a search,
- Using mirrors and flashlights to search under or in the crevices of furniture, and
- Reporting sharps hazards and near misses.
When handling sharps, NIOSH recommends:
- Not handing needles/sharps to other officers,
- Never recapping needles or taking syringes apart,
- Using FDA-cleared sharps containers that meet sharps container requirements at 1910.1030(d)(4),
- Replacing sharps containers when they reach the “full” line of the containers, and
- Disposing sharps containers per your state environmental waste laws and regulations.
If an officer suffers an exposure incident involving a contaminated needlestick/sharp, the fact sheet urges the officer to:
- Wash the injured area with soap and water, and
- Follow your law enforcement department’s plan for what to do (e.g., report injuries according to plan) and where to seek treatment.
Treatment should be sought from a healthcare provider immediately. That provider may offer medication or a vaccine to prevent infection.
Earlier NIOSH guidance
The latest fact sheet comes on the heels of an 8-page guidance document from NIOSH — DHHS (NIOSH) Publication No. 2022-154. Learn more about that in our J. J. Keller® Compliance Network article, “NIOSH report points at sharps injuries in law enforcement,” from September 7, 2022.
Key to remember
A recent NIOSH fact sheet argues that law enforcement officers who do searches are at risk of needlestick/sharps incidents! The agency offers tips about how to stay safe and how to handle and dispose of sharps safely. It also explains what to do if there’s an exposure incident.