Suture needle handling in the operating theatre; what is the safest method? A survey of surgical nursing opinion

scientific article published on 23 September 2015

Suture needle handling in the operating theatre; what is the safest method? A survey of surgical nursing opinion is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1136/INJURYPREV-2015-041607
P698PubMed publication ID26399610

P50authorThanos AthanasiouQ89313115
P2093author name stringDavid Coleman
Marios Nicolaou
Georgina J Williams
P2860cites workIncrease in sharps injuries in surgical settings versus nonsurgical settings after passage of national needlestick legislation.Q30452946
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Surgical pearl: a simple means of disarming the "locked and loaded" needleQ37248762
Needlestick and sharps injuries among a cross-section of physicians in Mainland ChinaQ40357216
Hands-free technique in the operating room: reduction in body fluid exposure and the value of a training videoQ42115562
Impressing the scrub nurseQ42175870
Prevalence of nonreporting behavior of sharps injuries in Taiwanese health care workersQ42603125
A survey of doctors' and nurses' knowledge, attitudes and compliance with infection control guidelines in Birmingham teaching hospitalsQ43694767
A descriptive study of blood exposure incidents among healthcare workers in a university hospital in Sweden.Q51547126
Preventing sharps injuries in the operating room.Q51628410
The association of needlestick injury with depressive symptoms among first-year medical residents in Japan.Q51894679
P433issue2
P304page(s)135-139
P577publication date2015-09-23
P1433published inInjury PreventionQ6034411
P1476titleSuture needle handling in the operating theatre; what is the safest method? A survey of surgical nursing opinion
P478volume22