I'm not going to spend pointless hours debating on a forum about the need for filtered needles,I was just pointing and referencing studies which come to the conclusion that filtered needles are necessary. I do find it silly that two people neg repped me for simply posting valid sources to support my view. I try to my best to debate honorably and will not stoop to low to be unethical or lie to prove a point at all costs
. It seems that the internet does have a conflicting view on whether filtered needles are useful,but overall it seems to me from spending more time researching that there is a far greater support for their use than not. Sure,I found a partial Jstor article that negated their usefulness,but also one that praised their usefulness when withdrawing from glass ampoules. Maybe I confused people with with my honest admission of conflicting data found on the net.I,however, today made a more thorough search on the net as time allowed. What i found was an overwhelming(by far) support among the medical community for filtered needles
.I'm also too nice,unless provoked to be a great debater,and should have looked through IMLJ sources which are obviously flawed and dated,but I guess I naively expected him to read them more thoroughly.
Thanks NGF for you last post.I didn't even notice it,until the middle of this reply,but it cleared some thing up in regarding accuracy.
Until then however you justify your choices is none of my business, just try not to mislead others before you turn 'glass ampoule contamination' into the next fluoride
. I doubt an article that you presented dated October1947 vs the one from Japan which directly refutes yours ( mine,1983) is going to mislead anyone..Technology as well as medicine from 1947 to 1983 has increased leaps and bounds. Heck back then the Electron microscope was a fairly new invention far from being refined and computers used to analyze data were next to useless.You might as well have quotes a study from the 1800s as far as medicinal technology is concerned. I hate to go there,but if you're trying to prove a point please post more current data,at the very minimum late 60's. How do I, or anyone else know whether they were reliably able to discern microscopic tissue damage with such archaic technology.Heck,even the definition of damage to the tissue considered to be dangerous might have been different then.Talk about flouride, this is the era when lobotomies were going full circle. I mean tell me where in modern journals do you find references dated from the 40's? Rare to never. Edit:
Your the one misleading others because you don't completely read the sources you post
and wrongly state inconclusive results as fact Something NG_F noted:
Fluoride contamination of course is not written about in medical journals or textbooks as anything to take seriously where as filtered needles and the dangers of glass shards are. I highly doubt that filtered needles would be written about in
current medical and nursing textbooks had there not been a belief in their efficacy.
Here,please read this below:. No,I'm not going to pay the money for the full article because I'm cheap,but there's enough here to prove a point regardless about them being taken seriously by
current professionals
Glass ampules and filter needles: an example of implementing the sixth 'R' in medication administration.(Best Practice)(American Society of Health System Pharmacists)
The use of filter needles is not often considered when discussing medication preparation from glass ampules. Fundamentals of nursing references prior to 1999 typically do not acknowledge this as an important component of safe medication administration. Safe medication administration traditionally has been regarded as adhering to five rights (5Rs): right medication, dose, patient, route, and time. Adding a sixth right may be appropriate--the right technique in medication preparation.
The use of filter needles in aspirating parenteral medications from glass ampules was first recommended by Katz, Borden, and Hirscher (1973). This recommendation came from their observations during their anesthesia clinical practice that intravenous medications packaged in glass ampules often became contaminated with glass particles when opened. The American Society of Health System Pharmacists (ASHP) and the Infusion Nurses Society (INS) also offer current recommendations regarding the use of filter needles to remove tiny glass particles that result when glass ampules are opened (ASHP, 2000; INS, 2002). Glass particulate and bacterial contamination have long been recognized as hazards associated with ampules (Stehbens & Florey, 1960). IV administration of glass particles may lead to complications, including pulmonary thrombi and microemboli, infusion phlebitis, end-organ granuloma formation, and inflammation (Furgang, 1974; Garvin & Gunner, 1964; Rodger & King, 2000; Shaw & Lyall, 1985; Waller & George, 1986; Zacher, Zornow, & Evans, 1991).
The hazards of glass particulate contamination associated with glass ampules and the effectiveness of filter needles in decreasing such contamination are discussed. Strategies for compliance with filter needle use are highlighted.
Parenteral Medication Administration
The fundamentals. The knowledge and skills needed to prepare medication from glass ampules are taught early in nursing curricula. A review of several nursing fundamentals and basic skills textbooks revealed different perspectives regarding the use of filter needles to withdraw medications from glass ampules. Textbooks written from 1992 to 1998 (Baer & Williams, 1992; Craven & Hirnle, 1996; Elkin, Perry, & Potter, 1996; Kozier, Erb, Blais, Wilkinson, & Van Leuven, 1998; Perry & Potter, 1998; Taylor, Lillis, & LeMone, 1993) indicated that use of filter needles was optional. Books written from 1999 to 2005 (DeLaune & Ladner, 2002; Perry & Potter, 2002; Potter & Perry, 1999, 2003, 2005) recommended filter needle use when aspirating medication from glass ampules. This change may not have been communicated clearly to practicing nurses, who may consider use of a filter needle to be discretionary.
Even nurse educators and leaders do not seem to perceive the importance of filter needle use. During hospital orientation, the use of filter needles is not validated as a core competency, perhaps because of the assumption that students have already mastered this skill (Hadawa
Source:
http://www.highbeam....-154069203.htmlYes; there was another study I read a long time ago (don't have time to locate at the moment) which said glass contamination was only present in ~69% of test cases in their experiment
I think you read that study recently and it was from one I just sourced yesterday,except it was 65% and not 69%
Seven hundred and ninety eight ampoules were inspected. Glass particles were detected in 65% of ampoules (95% CI 61.6-68.3)
another study also mentioned that filters are entirely ineffective when contents are aspirated forcefully
Again, your using information from a another study I posted yesterday.
Forced is the key word,and it would make perfect sense as forcing something almost always has the desired opposite effect.
Also in support of this theory, you notice that the 25 gauge needle showed a higher mean than those lower (thinner needle = more contamination). My guess is that more particles were drawn in due to the suction from aspiration being higher (smaller diameter needle).
Where are you reading that smaller needles =More contamination. You do realize that the study I posted that you're using to get that information stated that 23 gauge needles and smaller had results equal to filtered needles which was 0 glass particles. A 25 gauge would be
smaller not larger than a 23 gauge.
Comparing my coworker silicates contamination and glass contamination as apples to oranges is not a a good analogy on your part, because I provided a relevant point.Size does matter in relation to filtration of both glass from ampoules and silicates. My point was not to compare the difference between glass shards and ampules.Habing a filter that was only good for larger contaminants,was as good as having no filter at all when it came to silicates, There was no OSHA standards for silicates which are water glass or liquid glass or the use of appropriate filters. at that time since their dangers were considered negligible.Modern science didn't even convince the Epa until the mid 80's that asbestos was harmful. That reminds me, that also gives relevance to my point about your outdated article with inconclusive results.
I think I proved enough of a point here. Research and knowledge is the key to prevention of hazards,and obviously its safer to err on the side of caution,especially when the dollar expense is negligible.
IMLJ I also refuse to debate further with you or others here on this topic. Its not really that important to me as I feel I've given more than enough sources for my point of view, plus I feel I'm doing the right thing by using filtered needles,and don't need to spend countless hours trying to convince someone else. If they care about their health they can either pay heed to the sources I gave or do their own research.
Lastly,I have in the past spent countless hours debating with someone on another forum about a topic,ended up using 10 articles to his 2 to support my viewpoint,and even purchased current books to source from.What ended up happening was I was spending 90% of the time in the debate,only to find the other poster was constantly using either old, proven unreliable sources, or extremely biased primary sources, since this was a history forum. He was convinced about his point regardless of whether most of the forum was in agreement with me, or whether the sources I provided were far superior than his.When I tried to quit the debate he tried to get me to agree that I conceded my defeat in the debate because I refused to spend my entire life debating with him. Only to find out later he was using information directly from my sources and trying to debate others on different topics!Funny my current sources written by military historians (Colonels with masters and P.H.D.'s )were flawed in relation to his WIki articles when they didn't support his view at the time -LOL. So never again! Sorry for the rant at the end all,I just hate spending my time to no avail.
Edited by Bigbrains, 30 September 2012 - 07:30 AM.