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Safety
Laboratorians
working with stool specimens face potential risks including ingestion of
eggs or cysts, skin penetration by infective larvae, and infection by nonparasitic agents found in stool and
biologic fluids. These risks can be minimized by adopting universal precautions as
well as standard microbiological laboratory practices (Biosafety Level 2).
These include:
- Wear protective
safety glasses, gloves and laboratory coat when processing specimens.
- Use biological safety cabinets
as needed.
- Do not eat, drink, smoke, apply
cosmetics or manipulate contact lenses in work area.
- Decontaminate work surface at
least once a day and after any spill of potentially infectious material.
- If you have cuts or abrasions
on the skin of your hands, cover them with adhesive dressing.
- If you use any sharp
instruments, dispose of them in a sharps container for decontamination.
- Remove gloves and wash your
hands after completing any task involving the handling of fecal material.
Note:
These precautions should be taken even with stool specimens that have been fixed in
preservatives because they may still be infectious. For
example, fixation in formalin takes days or weeks to kill some parasite cysts or oocysts
that are protected by a thick shell. Eggs of Ascaris lumbricoides
may continue to develop and are infectious even when preserved in formalin.
For more information on
safety, visit the Web site of the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention to view biosafety guidelines (http://www.cdc.gov/od/ohs/biosfty/bmbl4/b4af.htm) or the
Web site of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) (http://www.osha.gov/).
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