Hassan Nadira Mansour, Shalaby Safynaz El Saied, Atalla Asmaa Omar, Younis Eman Ali
Public Health and Community Medicine Department, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta University, Tanta, Egypt.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int. 2021 May;28(18):23193-23203. doi: 10.1007/s11356-021-12393-z. Epub 2021 Jan 13.
In Egypt, there are 8.9 million adult diabetics using almost 16 million insulin injection devices daily. Unsafe disposal of these sharps will result in many environmental and public health hazards. This study aimed at evaluating knowledge and practice of diabetic patients toward safe disposal of insulin injection devices. Cross-sectional study and health education sessions were carried out at diabetic outpatient clinic of the Internal Medicine Department, Tanta University Hospitals in Middle Delta, Egypt, during a period of 2 months (November through December 2019). The study enrolled diabetics who were > 12 years age, using insulin therapy for > 1 year, and females that do not have gestational diabetes. By using systematic random sampling, 450 patients were selected from diabetic patients attending the clinic during the period of the study. Patients' knowledge and practice of insulin injection device disposal were assessed and evaluated using predesigned questionnaire. Verbal health education message and printed pamphlet were given to illustrate safe disposal. Out of the selected samples, 429 completed the questionnaires. Out of those participants, 85.5% had poor knowledge and only 13.5% had good practice. A total of 86.5% dispose at household collection bin, 65.3% reuse syringe, and 63.21% throw it at the nearest garbage bin when takes the injection outside home. Binary logistic regression revealed that female sex (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 2.37; 95% confidence (CI), 1.13-4.94; p = 0.022), rural residence (AOR, 3.05; 95% CI, 1.62-5.72; p = 0.001) and low income (AOR = 2.11; 95% CI, 1.06-4.18; p = 0.033) were the main predicting sociodemographic factors for poor practice. Meanwhile, syringe usage (AOR = 2.81; 95% CI, 1.31-6.03; p = 0.008), twice daily schedule (AOR = 2.82; 95% CI, 1.51-5.26; p = 0.001), patient himself as injection provider (AOR = 2.268; 95% CI, 1.18-4.36; p = 0.014), and unawareness of how to dispose sharps safely (AOR = 7.33; 95% CI, 3.58-14.99; p < 0.001) were the predicting factors of bad practice related to patient and treatment characteristic. Vast majority of studied diabetic patients do not use or dispose insulin injection devices safely. As the problem is nationwide, an integrated nationwide program is needed including a structured health education module for diabetic patients and a system for collection of home insulin sharps from those patients and disposing them safely.
在埃及,有890万成年糖尿病患者,他们每天使用近1600万个胰岛素注射装置。这些锐器的不安全处置会导致许多环境和公共卫生危害。本研究旨在评估糖尿病患者对胰岛素注射装置安全处置的知识和实践情况。在埃及中三角洲坦塔大学医院内科糖尿病门诊进行了为期2个月(2019年11月至12月)的横断面研究和健康教育课程。该研究纳入了年龄大于12岁、使用胰岛素治疗超过1年且非妊娠糖尿病的女性糖尿病患者。通过系统随机抽样,从研究期间到诊所就诊的糖尿病患者中选取了450名患者。使用预先设计的问卷对患者胰岛素注射装置处置的知识和实践进行评估。提供了口头健康教育信息和印刷小册子来说明安全处置方法。在选定的样本中,429人完成了问卷。在这些参与者中,85.5%的人知识匮乏,只有13.5%的人实践良好。共有86.5%的人将其丢弃在家用垃圾桶中,65.3%的人重复使用注射器,63.21%的人在外出注射时将其扔到最近的垃圾桶。二元逻辑回归显示,女性(调整后的优势比[AOR]为2.37;95%置信区间[CI]为1.13 - 4.94;p = 0.022)、农村居住(AOR为3.05;95% CI为1.62 - 5.72;p = 0.001)和低收入(AOR = 2.11;95% CI为1.06 - 4.18;p = 0.033)是实践不佳的主要社会人口统计学预测因素。同时,注射器使用情况(AOR = 2.81;95% CI为1.31 - 6.03;p = 0.008)、每日两次注射方案(AOR = 2.82;95% CI为1.51 - 5.26;p = 0.001)、患者自己作为注射者(AOR = 2.268;95% CI为1.18 - 4.36;p = 0.014)以及对如何安全处置锐器缺乏认识(AOR = 7.33;95% CI为3.58 - 14.99;p < 0.001)是与患者和治疗特征相关的不良实践的预测因素。绝大多数接受研究的糖尿病患者没有安全地使用或处置胰岛素注射装置。由于该问题在全国范围内存在,需要一个综合的全国性计划,包括为糖尿病患者制定结构化的健康教育模块以及一个从这些患者家中收集胰岛素锐器并进行安全处置的系统。