Frequency of workplace incidents and injuries in veterinarians, veterinary nurses and veterinary students and measures to control these

Author:

Johnson L12ORCID,Fritschi L1

Affiliation:

1. School of Population Health Curtin University Perth Western Australia Australia

2. SAFERVETS, www.safervets.com

Abstract

BackgroundVeterinarians, veterinary nurses and veterinary students work and train in a variety of environments and are exposed to a wide range of hazards.Objectives(1) To compare the rate of health and safety incidents and injuries between veterinarians, veterinary nurses and veterinary students. (2) To investigate the health and safety hazard controls present in Australian veterinary workplaces.Study DesignA cross‐sectional study, using an online questionnaire.MethodsAnonymous links to the questionnaire were disseminated to Australian veterinarians, veterinary nurses and veterinary students.ResultsA total of 494 veterinarians, 484 veterinary nurses and 212 veterinary students completed the survey. Incidents and injuries were common, particularly sharps‐related injuries and animal bites. Australian veterinary nurses and veterinarians experienced the studied incidents at similar rates to each other. Veterinary students experienced some incidents and injuries at rates higher than both veterinarians and veterinary nurses, including heatstroke, hypothermia, sunburn, electric shock, loss of consciousness, being rammed or pushed over by an animal and farm equipment injuries. Of the workplace hazard controls reported, first aid boxes were most commonly present, and safety meetings occurred least commonly. Veterinary nurses received Q fever and rabies vaccines much less frequently than veterinarians and veterinary students.ConclusionThis study demonstrated that improvements need to be made to the occupational health and safety standards in the Australian veterinary sector. Veterinarians and veterinary nurses had suboptimal rates of access to many of the required and critical workplace health and safety controls. Improvements to the standard of health and safety training of veterinary students are indicated, given their higher rates of certain incidents and injury.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference65 articles.

1. Australian Veterinary Association.Workforce survey 2021 – analysis. Available at:https://www.ava.com.au/siteassets/news/ava-workforce-survey-analysis-2021-final.pdf. Accessed August 2023.

2. Australian government: Labour Market Insights.Veterinary nurses (ID 3613). Available at:https://labourmarketinsights.gov.au/. Accessed August 2023.

3. Dr Regaei Shenouda (Australian Veterinary Association Veterinary Executive Officer).Veterinary students in Australia.2023. [Personal interview 21st March] (unpublished).

4. Health Hazards Among Veterinarians:

5. Disease and injury among veterinarians

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