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1

Seneca, Candace. About universal precautions. Castle Point, [N.Y.]: Infection Control, VAMC, 1988.

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2

Acello, Barbara. Infection Control Update, 1996. Albany, NY: Delmar Publishers, 1997.

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3

Grossman, Leigh B. Infection control for the health care worker. 2nd ed. Baltimore, Md: Williams & Wilkins, 1995.

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4

Grossman, Leigh B. Infection control for the health care worker. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1994.

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5

E, Allen James. Key federal requirements for nursing facilities. 2nd ed. New York: Springer Pub. Co., 1994.

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6

Key federal requirements for nursing facilities. New York: Springer Pub. Co., 1992.

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7

Wood, Peter R. Cross infection control in dentistry: A practical illustrated guide. London: Wolfe Publishing Ltd., 1992.

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8

Commission, South African Law. Aspects of the law relating to AIDS: Interim report on: disposable syringes, needles and other hazardous materials; universal work place infection control measures (universal precautions); national compulsory standard for condoms; regulations relating to communicable diseases and the notification of notifiable medical conditions; national policy on HIV testing and informed consent. [Pretoria]: The Commission, 1997.

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9

Commission, South African Law. Aspects of the law relating to AIDS: National compulsory standard for condoms, disposable syringes, needles and other hazardous materials, universal work place infection control measures (universal precautions), medical certificates in respect of HIV/AIDS related deaths, national policy on HIV testing and informed consent, regulations relating to communicable diseases and the notification of notifiable medical conditions. [Pretoria]: The Commission, 1996.

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10

Webb, Stephen. Universal Precautions. Independently Published, 2020.

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11

Pugliese, Gina. Universal Precautions: Policies, Procedures, and Resources. Amer Hospital Pub, 1990.

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12

Gina, Pugliese, Lynch Patricia 1941-, and Jackson Marguerite, eds. Universal precautions: Policies, procedures, and resources. Chicago, Ill: American Hospital Pub., 1991.

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13

National Association of Theatre Nurses., ed. Universal precautions and infection control: In the perioperative setting. Harrogate: National Association of Theatre Nurses, 1997.

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14

National Institutes of Health (U.S.). Clinical Center, ed. Universal precautions at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center. [Bethesda, Md.?]: The Center, 1999.

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15

Roup, Brenda Jacobs. FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS COMPLIANCE BY CRITICAL CARE NURSES. 1995.

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16

Draper, Violet. UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS PRACTICES AMONG REGISTERED NURSES WITHIN THE KASKASKIA COLLEGE DISTRICT IN SOUTHERN ILLINOIS (HEALTH PRECAUTIONS, HIV, IMMUNE DEFICIENCY). 1991.

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17

Directorate, Canada Health Services, and Laboratory Centre for Disease Control (Canada). Bureau of Communicable Disease Epidemiology, eds. Infection control guidelines for isolation and precaution techniques. Ottawa, Ont: Health Services and Promotion Branch, Dept. of National Health and Welfare, 1990.

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18

Mitchell, Brenda Wright. THE INFLUENCE OF COMPUTER-ASSISTED INSTRUCTION ON THE RATE OF UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS RELATED BEHAVIORS (REGISTERED NURSES, IMMUNE DEFICIENCY). 1995.

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19

Richardson, Patricia Diane. KNOWLEDGE OF HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS, FEAR OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROME AND NURSES' COMPLIANCE WITH UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS (IMMUNE DEFICIENCY). 1992.

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20

Mccall, Marlene. SUSCEPTIBILITY TO HIV/AIDS AND EFFECTIVENESS OF UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS AS PERCEIVED BY PRACTICING NURSES AND BY STUDENT NURSES (IMMUNE DEFICIENCY). 1994.

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21

Zelman, Mark. Infection Control and Safety. Pearson, 2019.

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22

Update: Universal precautions for prevention of transmission of human immunodeficiency virus, hepatitis B virus, and other bloodborne pathogens in health-care settings. [Atlanta, Ga.?: Centers for Disease Control, 1988.

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23

Sherman-Price, Joanne M. COMPLIANCE AND NONCOMPLIANCE OF UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS AMONG DIFFERENT GROUPS OF HEALTHCARE WORKERS USING THE CONSTRUCT OF THE HEALTH BELIEF MODEL: IMPLICATIONS FOR CURRICULUM DECISIONMAKING. 1996.

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24

Davis, Mark S. Advanced Precautions for Today's O.R.: The Operating Room Professional's Handbook for the Prevention of Sharp Injuries and Bloodborne Exposures. Sweinbinder Publications LLC, 1999.

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25

American Society of Anesthesiologists. Task Force on Infection Control., ed. Recommendations for infection control for the practice of anesthesiology. 2nd ed. Park Ridge, Ill: American Society of Anesthesiologists, 1998.

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26

Paice, Judith A. Pain. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190204709.003.0001.

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To provide safe and effective pain relief, the palliative advanced practice registered nurse (APRN) must possess exceptional pain assessment skills including thorough history-taking and physical examination. Biological, psychological, social, and spiritual factors should be considered part of a complete assessment and serve as a guide for the development of a comprehensive plan of care. APRNs must have comprehensive knowledge of pain management options including appropriate pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic therapies. The chapter includes a discussion of various pain syndromes, physical therapy, interventional techniques, and cognitive-behavioral strategies in addition to medical management of pain. Universal precautions to detect aberrant behavior is described, and safe prescribing practices are outlined.
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27

Greaves, Ian, and Paul Hunt. Biological Incidents. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199238088.003.0009.

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Chapter 9 covers information on recognition of a biological incident, natural disease outbreaks, accidental release of pathogenic organisms, bioterrorism incidents, features of an intentional biological agent release, recognition of an intentional biological agent release, bioterrorism surveillance, and biological agent biodromes, initial management of a suspected biological agent release incident, general incident management principles, universal (standard) precautions, personal protective equipment, decontamination at scene, biological agent transmissibility and public health impact, mathematical models of infection spread, pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis, the hospital response to a biological incident, primary care, cardinal signs and tips for key biological agents, the role of hospital clinicians, and the unidentified biological agent and ‘white powder’ incidents.
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28

Cross Infection Control in Dentistry: A Practical Illustrated Guide. Mosby-Year Book, 1993.

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29

Fudin, Jeffrey, Jacqueline Cleary, Courtney Kominek, Abigail Brooks, and Thien C. Pham. Screening Patients for Opioid Risk (DRAFT). Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190265366.003.0010.

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The narrow therapeutic index associated with most analgesic opioids creates a high degree of risk, obliging caution in patient selection; this chapter describes screening practices. More attention is due to the use of opioid therapy for chronic non-cancer pain as episodes of respiratory arrest increase. Universal precautions are recommended for all patients. Before and throughout treatment, selected tools assessing risk and misuse should be employed. Increased access to the opioid antagonist naloxone has followed the increase in opioid poisoning deaths; the Risk Index for Overdose or Serious Opioid-induced Respiratory Depression (RIOSORD) helps determine the likelihood of an opioid overdose, serving to select candidates for at-home naloxone access. Urine drug testing aids treatment plan adherence. Tables include: a comparison of screening tools for risk stratification; a comparison of tools for assessment of opioid misuse; the scoring procedure for the RIOSORD; and a list of risk classes with predicted probabilities.
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30

Hulse, Elspeth J., and Michael Eddleston. Management of pesticide and agricultural chemical poisoning. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199600830.003.0330.

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Poisoning with agricultural chemicals is common in rural Asia-Pacific with up to 300,000 annual deaths from pesticide self-poisoning. The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of pesticides can vary markedly depending on the chemicals ingested, the pesticide’s lipid solubility, enzyme reactivation, co-ingested toxicants, and extent of decontamination and organ dysfunction. Diagnosis and management is based on clinical signs and standard investigations. Staff should wear standard universal precaution attire for examining and treating patients; nosocomial poisoning is rare. Management of poisonings should include careful airway intervention and administration of oxygen, except in suspected paraquat poisoning. Organophosphorus insecticide poisoning causes a cholinergic crisis with excess airway secretions and acute respiratory failure. Patients should be treated with intravenous atropine and observed for the neuromuscular disorder ‘intermediate syndrome’, which can cause further paralysis and respiratory failure after 24 hours. Few antidotes exist for other agricultural chemical poisonings with the mainstay of treatment being supportive standard ICU care.
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31

Fogelin, Robert J. Part Twelve. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190673505.003.0012.

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Part 12 is bracketed by two problematic passages: Philo expresses extravagant religious commitments, and he declares that “to be a philosophical Sceptic is, in a man of letters, the first and most essential step toward being a sound believing Christian.” The dialectical structure of the Dialogues reflects that in the Treatise and the Enquiry. Hume recognizes the strong attraction of abstruse philosophy and thus the importance of taking precautions against it. When Philo recommends a brand of philosophical skepticism, it is the mitigated skepticism in the closing of the Enquiry. His closing adoration of a divine being is not the product of reasoning at all. It is, when it occurs, irresistible—Cleanthes’ irregular argument. Cleanthes’ “cause of order in the universe” is reduced to an anemic “having some remote analogy to human intelligence.” “Who Speaks for Hume?” is answered with assurance: Cleanthes and Philo do, and sometimes even Demea.
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