Good Afternoon Histonetters,
Three weeks ago, I was cutting at a manual microtome and when I finished laying 
my ribbon on the waterbath and turned back to my block, I happened to nick my 
finger on the end of my microtome blade.  It was a freak accident of my finger 
being in the wrong place at the wrong time.  I required 2 stitches.  No big 
deal.  Histotechs often have scars.  In fact this is my second one on this 
finger.  The last incident was over 10 years ago at another institution.  I was 
invited today to a meeting of some higher level management to discuss the 
incident and to come up with interventions to prevent these incidents in the 
future.  This was a freak accident that couldn't have been prevented, in my 
opinion. It is impossible to transfer a ribbon to your waterbath and put the 
blade guard up at the same time.  I do want to come to the meeting with ideas 
though because I am walking into a room full of people who have never laid eyes 
on a microtome and I don't want them to come up with ideas for me.  Here are 
some measures that we already have in place:
1) We always lock our wheel when we are not turning it.
2) We put our blade guard up when we are changing out a block or when we walk 
away from our microtome.
3) After cleaning our microtomes, we put them back together and check to make 
sure they are locked appropriately.
4) We never leave a blade in the microtome when we are leaving for the day.

Thanks for your help,
Kelly

Kelly Pairan,  HT (ASCP)CM, QIHC (ASCP)
Histology Supervisor-Anatomic Pathology
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Email:  kelly.pai...@nationwidechildrens.org
ph: 614-722-5414
fx: 614-722-3033

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