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Personal Health & Compliance

To safely work in the clinic long-term, every staff member must maintain their own occupational health record and participate in the clinic's infection control governance.


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A. Hepatitis B Immunization

Who Must Be Vaccinated

All healthcare workers exposed to blood and body fluids.

Schedule

DoseTiming
1stBaseline (pre-placement)
2nd1 month after 1st
3rd6 months after 1st

Post-Vaccination Titers

  • Test anti-HBs 1–2 months after completing the 3rd dose.
  • >=10 mIU/mL = immune. Document and file.
  • <10 mIU/mL = non-responder. Repeat series or receive HBIG after any exposure. [1]
Non-Responders

If you do not seroconvert after two complete vaccine series, you are classified as a non-responder. You must receive HBIG after any blood exposure regardless of the source patient's status.


B. Tuberculosis Screening

Who Must Be Screened

Staff who handle TB patients or work in environments where TB transmission is possible.

Schedule

TimingTests
Pre-placementMantoux test + chest X-ray
Periodic (every 1–2 years)Mantoux test or IGRA + symptom review
Pre-retirementChest X-ray + symptom review

If Mantoux Converts

A new positive Mantoux (>=10 mm induration, or >=5 mm if immunocompromised) requires:

  1. Chest X-ray to rule out active TB
  2. Referral to the district TB clinic for latent TB evaluation
  3. Work restriction until active TB is excluded

VaccineScheduleNotes
InfluenzaAnnualRecommended for all patient-facing staff
MMR2 doses if non-immuneEspecially for staff born after 1967 with no documented immunity
Varicella2 doses if no history of chickenpoxCritical for staff working with immunocompromised patients
Tdap1 dose, then Td every 10 yearsReplace one Td dose with Tdap

D. Sharps Injury Surveillance (SIS)

Your Responsibility

  • Report every needlestick, sharps injury, and mucosal splash.
  • Do not downplay minor injuries — even shallow scratches can transmit blood-borne pathogens.
  • Ensure your supervisor files OHU/SIS-1 and SIS-2 within 24 hours.
  • Attend all scheduled follow-up appointments after an exposure. [1]

Each clinic appoints a Link Nurse specifically trained in infection control. They:

  • Conduct internal audits (hand hygiene compliance, bin dating, PPE availability)
  • Act as the liaison between clinic administration and staff
  • Oversee infection control training and competency updates
  • Report findings to the clinic-level Infection Control Committee

What Auditors Check

CheckpointFrequencyStandard
Hand hygiene techniqueMonthlyWHO 5 Moments observed
Sharps bin dating / fill levelWeeklyDated, <=3/4 full, sealed on time
Spillage kit completenessWeeklyAll items present and in-date
PPE stock levelsWeeklyNo stock-outs of gloves, masks, aprons
Environmental cleaning qualityMonthlyColour-coded mop compliance, terminal cleaning logs

External Audits

The State Health Department conducts external audits twice a year. Findings are reported to the District Health Office and clinic management. Corrective action plans must be submitted within the stipulated timeframe.


F. Staff Responsibilities Summary

  • Hepatitis B vaccination series completed and titers documented
  • TB screening up to date (Mantoux + CXR)
  • Annual influenza vaccination (recommended)
  • SIS training completed
  • Attend Link Nurse training when nominated
  • Participate in internal audits without obstruction
  • Maintain personal health record accessible to Occupational Health Unit
Personal Health is Patient Safety

A staff member with undiagnosed TB or non-immune Hepatitis B status is a risk to both themselves and the patients they serve. Keeping your own health record current is not bureaucracy — it is clinical duty.

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Sources

  1. Garis Panduan: Kawalan Infeksi Fasiliti Kesihatan Primer 2019

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