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170640

Occupational Health Hazards among Pregnant Nurses in Damietta and Khartoum General Hospitals: An Overview

Article

Last updated: 03 Jan 2025

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Abstract

The pregnant nurses' exposure of the hazards daily during contact with sick patients, infectious
agents, teratogenic chemicals, radiation and environmental risks. Aim of the study: To assess
Occupational health hazards among pregnant nurses in Damietta and Khartoum of general hospitals:
An overview. Design: A comparative descriptive research design was used to conduct this study.
Setting: carried out in Damietta and Khartoum general hospitals (Egypt and Sudan). Sample: All
pregnant nurses working in all departments of hospitals and outpatient clinics. It was 135 pregnant
nurses in Damietta and 50 pregnant nurses in Khartoum. Tools : four tools were used for data
collection, tool l: demographic characteristics for pregnant nurses, medical and obstetric history of
nurses, nurses habits, nurses knowledge regarding occupational health hazed, tool II- physical
assessment of studied nurses, tool III :- nurses practices regarding use of the personal protective
equipment, tool IV: Assessment of work environment. Result: concerning nurses knowledge,
shows that 40% of nurses had satisfactory knowledge regarding occupational health hazards in
Damietta hospital, while, 70% of them had satisfactory knowledge in Khartoum hospital. Regarding
nurses practices for use of personal protective equipment, shows that 70% of nurses had done
practices regarding uses of personal protective equipment in Damietta hospital, while, 80% of them
had done practices in Khartoum hospital. Concerning work environment it reveals a highly
statistically significant differences regarding physical work environment, housekeeping, floors,
stairs, mean of exit, employee facilities, fire protection, electrical, material handling, storage,
machining guarding and clinic inside the factor. Conclusion: this study concluded that there were
no statistically important correlation between total knowledge about occupational health hazards
facing nurses in the workplace and total practices regarding use of PPE measures (P<0.05).
Recommendation: Continuing nurse health education program to reduce occupational health risk in
the workplace

DOI

10.21608/ejhc.2020.170640

Keywords

Occupational, Health hazard, pregnant nurses and general hospitals

Authors

First Name

Maha

Last Name

Moussa Mohamed Mouss

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Assistant Professor, Community Health Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Port- Said University, Egypt

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Naglaa

Last Name

Ibrahim Mohamed Gida

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Assistant Professor, Community Health Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Port- Said University, Egypt

Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Fatma

Last Name

Zaki Mohamed Farahat

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Maternity, Gynecology and obstetrics, Faculty of Nursing, Port Said University, Port Said, Egypt

Email

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City

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Orcid

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Volume

11

Article Issue

4

Related Issue

18689

Issue Date

2020-12-01

Receive Date

2021-05-19

Publish Date

2020-12-01

Page Start

670

Page End

690

Print ISSN

1687-9546

Online ISSN

3009-6766

Link

https://ejhc.journals.ekb.eg/article_170640.html

Detail API

https://ejhc.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=170640

Order

38

Type

Original Article

Type Code

631

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Egyptian Journal of Health Care

Publication Link

https://ejhc.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Occupational Health Hazards among Pregnant Nurses in Damietta and Khartoum General Hospitals: An Overview

Details

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023