Digital Press Kit
The Impact of Unsafe Injection Practices in U.S. Healthcare Settings
More than 150,000 patients have been impacted by unsafe injection practices since 2001. Breakdowns in proper infection control often involve providers reusing needles, syringes or single-dose medication vials, all of which are meant for one patient and one procedure. These breaches can cause irreparable damage exposing patients to bloodborne illnesses, such as hepatitis and HIV, and to life-threatening bacterial infections. Although safe injection practices represent very basic infection control measures, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) routinely identifies and investigates outbreaks associated with deficient practices.
- Since 2001, at least 48 outbreaks have occurred that CDC is aware of: 21 of these outbreaks involved transmission of hepatitis B or hepatitis C, and the other 27 represented outbreaks of bacterial infections, most of which involved invasive bloodstream infections. All these outbreaks were not from intrinsically contaminated products received from a pharmacy or drug company.
- CDC released a table of select recent outbreaks and patient notification events that occurred in a variety of settings, including primary care clinics, pediatric offices, ambulatory surgical centers, pain clinics, imaging facilities, oncology clinics, and even health fairs.Read more about the impact .
- The One & Only Campaign aims to eradicate outbreaks from unsafe medical injections by raising awareness among patients and healthcare providers about proper practices. The campaign is a public health effort produced by the SIPC, a collaboration of several medical societies, state health departments, private medical companies, and patient advocates led by the CDC.
Our Partners
Campaign outreach and activities are driven by SIPC and its State Health Department partners in Nevada, New Jersey, New York and North Carolina. Members of the SIPC include:- Accreditation Association for Ambulatory
- Health Care
- Ambulatory Surgery Center Association
- American Association of Nurse Anesthetists
- American Society for Healthcare Risk Management
- Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc
- Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO)
- Bayer Healthcare
- BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company)
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- CDC Foundation
- Covidien
- HONOReform Foundation
- Hospira
- Institute for Safe Medication Practices
- National Association of County & City Health Officials
- Nebraska Medical Association
- Nevada State Medical Association
- Premier healthcare alliance
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration-Safe Use Initiative (advisory role)
Selected Quotes
“The three-point rule is simple: Use needles, syringes, and single-dose medication vials only one time, for one patient. Patients and healthcare providers must insist on these infection control basics to avoid serious infections.”
- Dr. Joseph Perz, DrPH, MA, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
- Dr. Joseph Perz, DrPH, MA, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
“Safe injection practices are basic but they are not optional – they are every provider’s responsibility.”
- Dr. Michael Bell, MD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
- Dr. Michael Bell, MD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
“Patients deserve safe care. Many patients who contract infections through a reused needle, syringe, or single-dose vial are already ill and receiving treatment for cancer, chronic pain, or a host of other conditions. We must be able to count on healthcare providers to heal and protect us. When healthcare workers follow CDC’s safe injection practices, problems are prevented. I encourage patients to speak up and request One Needle, One Syringe, Only One Time.”
- Evelyn McKnight, MD, HONOReform
- Evelyn McKnight, MD, HONOReform
Related Links
CDC Resources:
- CDC Grand Rounds Presentation
- One & Only Campaign Backgrounder
- One & Only Campaign Fact Sheet
- Guidelines, Position Statements, and Peer-Reviewed Articles
- Injection Safety http://www.cdc.gov/injectionsafety/
- Impact of Unsafe Injection Practices
- CDC Injection Safety Guidelines
- CDC Position Statement on the Use of Single-dose/Single-use Vials
- Safe Injection Practices FAQs
- CDC Grand Rounds: A Presentation of Unsafe Injection Practices
- Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion (DHQP)
- National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases (NCEZID)
Research and Publications:
- Patient Notification for Bloodborne Pathogen Testing due to Unsafe Injection Practices in the US Health Care Settings, 2001-2011 – Medical Care Journal, September 2012
- ‘HHS Has Taken Steps to Address Unsafe Injection Practices, but More Action Is Needed’ – GAO Report, July 2012
- ‘Invasive Staphylococcus aureus Infections Associated with Pain Injections and Reuse of Single-Dose Vials – Arizona and Delaware, 2012’ – CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, July 13, 2012
- Health Care – Associated Hepatitis C Virus Infections Attributed to Narcotic Diversion – Annals of Internal Medicine, April 2012
- Hepatitis B Outbreak Associated with a Hematology-Oncology Office Practice in New Jersey, 2009 – American Journal of Infection Control, October 2011
Contact Information
Graphics/Charts
Infographic from the "One and Only Campaign"
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Click on the image for the entire infographic
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