The point about a needle stick incident, is good and made me think further, but I think that is a different sort of injury. Yes, if you get a needle stick injury, the end if used is likely to be contaminated with something or you are accidentally injected then you could transmit all sorts of things to yourself, I agree. But I consider that a different type of injury to a small everyday cut / wound as you could easily get in the world outside work, as in it. A wound which can be cleaned out and in fact would bleed, the body’s own way of flushing a wound. As noted by others cleaning the wound is not necessarily 100% effective, but can be, as otherwise why bother. A needle stick injury you can’t really do anything, until test and treatment if necessary.
The link A Kurdziel provided as he notes does not exclude such incidents outside of Labs or Health care work, in fact it mentions farmers. They may be working with all sorts of zoonosis type micro biological diseases and medication etc. However, do you really feel that the HSE had an infection to a minor cut, when not deliberately working with microorganisms in mind when they wrote all that guidance? nothing within it indicates so.
As Johnc noted “He said such infections showing up some time after the injury occurred was not uncommon “. So, it is not uncommon and every tiny cut or scratch that happens in the workplace could become infected. It will be just down to luck if it does or does not. So, a small company could have a number of these very minor initial injuries, but end up with a load of RIDDOR reports, which then affect their stats and so potential work. Some of the larger companies when getting pre-qualification info just ask how many, not what. In my current organisation none of our customers are interested in our stats, so makes no difference if I report or not in that way. Again, I would question, are the HSE really interested in knowing about these minor injuries that by pure luck end up becoming worse. This is why I feel there is two stages, a cut and then some luck or not and an infection, it is not a certainty there will be an infection.
Not only that, what happens next if you are one of these unlucky companies, do they end up trying to stop every very minor cut / scratch. That would become impossible, but they would try or at least make the H&S bod try, all with a cry in the background of “too much H&S”.
How may plasters does your company use each month / year (Now what % of those could become RIDDOR). Fine if you are in an office you can work with a dressing that has to be kept clean, but the moment you are in a trade of some sort any restriction of what you can do, because you have to keep your infected dressing clean, means you can no longer do your full range of duties and so becomes reportable.
I consider that when we answer questions on here this view and outlook remains a guide for all those who read in the future. Isn’t it up to us to make a sensible interpretation? Yes, I would report a needle stick injury if there became an issue, because I think the infection is more closely linked to the injury and almost inevitable with a contaminated needle. But a minor everyday cut / scratch, is what it is and should unluckiness strike does not make the initial injury more than it really was. The HSE are not bother about broken fingers, so a minor cut seems a stretch.
Don’t get me wrong, it is an accident and there should be an investigation and perhaps something done to prevent reoccurrence, if people need to kneel on rough surfaces.
So, as a profession giving advice to those in the future, do we really think this should always be reportable, given the arguments for and against?
Chris