Safe Handling Awareness Overview |
History of Safe Handling |
Clinical Evidence of Risk
Hazardous Drug Classes |
Guidelines |
Safe Handling Solutions

Safe Handling Awareness
National Safe Handling Awareness Month and Day
BD is proud to be a sponsor of National Safe Handling Awareness Month (April) and Day (April 20), and we’re glad to encourage safe handling awareness by sharing educational resources that may facilitate increased employee safety and the proper handling of hazardous drugs.
Complimentary Safe Handling CE Webinar
To view this webinar - and other free safe handling CE programs supported by BD - click here.
Safe Handling Awareness Blog
BlogSubscribe to Carmel Pharma’s Safe Handling blog for information on the safe handling of hazardous drugs, industry news and solutions to the financial impact of the high cost of antineoplastic drugs.
History of Safe Handling
1940s
Cytotoxic drugs were developed from mustard gas used in WWI. There were very few safety standards in place with regard to hazardous drug handling. Clinicians used only gloves, masks and gowns for protection.
Late 1970s
1979 – The University of Helsinki reported that traces of chemotherapeutic agents were found in the urine of oncology nurses.
Early 1980s
Nurses reported they were experiencing side effects similar to those of chemotherapy patients – including nausea, vomiting, hair loss and mouth sores (Source: NITA 1980). This triggered the industry – particularly hospitals – to take notice and perform various studies to identify the cause of these side effects.
1990s and 2000s
Wipe studies published in the 1990s and early 2000s consistently reported similar findings, and it was soon clear that, regardless of employee skill and carefulness, contamination was still a problem.
Today
Studies continue to find hazardous drug contamination throughout pharmacy and nursing settings and in the urine of oncology staff, including those not directly involved in the preparation process.
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