|
Continued from Page 1
Latex can be difficult to avoid. In the hospital, it
might be found in everything from rubber stoppers to
catheters. But the majority of the allergy problem is
traced to rubber gloves. "Examination gloves are
probably 90 percent of the problem," said Diane
Flanagan, president of the Milwaukee-based American
Latex Allergy Association (ALERT). "The thing we
have to be careful to avoid is high-protein, powdered
latex examination gloves in the hospital environment.
Their time is up. They have to go," she said.
Powder is used to make it easier and faster to pull
the gloves on and off, but it is also efficient at sending
latex proteins into the air, where they can be inhaled.
Respiratory mucous membranes allow for easy entry of
the glove allergens. Continued exposure to allergens
increases sensitization and makes allergic reactions
worse.
According to an American Nurses Association survey
in 2001, with almost 5,000 responses, 39 percent of
respondents said their hospitals were still using powdered
latex gloves. "That was four years after the American
College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology published
a position statement saying that we should be eliminating
powder," Wilburn said.
After ICU nurse Heidi Kohout, RN, developed a latex
allergy in 1995, she was given special vinyl gloves.
"I had to take my own box from place to place.
But even if you're using a different kind of glove,
what other people are using gets into the air. People
snap gloves on and off all around you. Everybody else
in the ICU was using latex," she said.
Kohout ended up leaving her hospital job and finding
a job with the Visiting Nurses Association.
If you think you might be sensitive to latex, the first
thing you should do is try to get away from it. "Listen
to what your body is telling you and start learning
about it, not putting the blinders on like so many nurses
do, like I did," Kohout said. "You think you
can handle it or just take your antihistamine and it
will go away. But it doesn't go away."
The next step is to find an expert in allergy and immunology
who has experience with glove chemical sensitivity and
latex allergy, in order to get a diagnosis. Then report
any problems to your employee health unit. If the exposure
was work-related, you may need to document it for a
possible workers compensation claim.
Wilburn suggests that all nurses-even those without
latex sensitivity-contact their employee health unit
or occupational health provider to find out what kinds
of gloves are being used at work. If the employer doesn't
seem amenable to finding alternatives to latex gloves,
Wilburn suggests contacting a local union representative
or state nurses association.
"There's no place that you have to have a latex
glove," Wilburn said. Alternatives, such as nitrile
gloves, can provide adequate barrier protection, she
said.
Nurses who must-or who choose to-work in latex gloves
can reduce their risk of reaction by washing and drying
their hands thoroughly after removing the gloves, and
by avoiding oil-based hand creams or lotions, which
can deteriorate gloves, according to the National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health. Hypoallergenic latex
gloves won't reduce the risk of allergy, but they may
reduce allergic contact dermatitis from exposure to
chemical additives in the latex.
Unfortunately, no federal regulation requires that
hospitals and other health care employers become latex-safe.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration does
have a standard requiring that employers select the
most appropriate glove for an application, and its bloodborne
pathogens standard requires glove alternatives be provided,
Wilburn said.
Allergy experts at ALERT say that nurses have been
key players in getting hospitals to think about glove
selection and become latex-safe. Annie Calteaux, RN,
who helped form the association, knows firsthand.
She developed a latex allergy 10 years ago. She agreed
to stick with her hospital and manage a new emergency
department clinic, if the hospital made the clinic latex-free.
"Some employers aren't as gracious as my employer.
But now with the nursing shortage, I think that will
be changing," Calteaux said.
"The great thing about nursing is that there are
thousands and thousands of different jobs that you can
have when you're an RN," she said. "You will
find something you will be able to do, even with a latex
allergy."
Contact Beth Berk at berk2@prodigy.net
|