A1 |
2018 |
Circulation among nursing team members from different hospital sectors in the CSSD, selection based on workers’ desire and technical-scientific capacity, implementation of Continuing Education strategies for CSSD workers and on CSSD work in other sectors, and increased communication between the CSSD and other hospital sectors, nursing team members are proposing to give greater visibility to their work at CSSD. |
10.1590/0104-07072018006530015 |
A2 |
2016 |
With a team of one coordinating nurse and ten volunteer nurses, the Health Expeditionaries Association (Associação Expedicionários da Saúde) established a Surgical Center and a CSSD in a field hospital in an indigenous village, in the northern region of Brazil. The process had five stages: preparation of material and equipment at the distribution center; logistical preparation of the expedition assembly; assembly of SC and CSSD; disassembly of SC and CSSD; and return of materials and equipment to the distribution center. |
10.5327/Z1414-4425201600030007 |
A3 |
2016 |
Some characteristics of the CSSD nursing team at a general hospital in Rio de Janeiro are: of the 34 workers interviewed, 9 were nurses and 25 nursing technicians. Twenty-two were female, 15 were between 25 and 35 years old and none were over 55 years old; 13 had up to 5 years of training. Eleven had at least a college degree; 22 worked between 1 to 10 years in the CSSD; 19 worked at CSSD by personal choice and 13 by institutional need; and 21 workers reported having health problems, the most prevalent musculoskeletal disorders. |
10.9789/2175-5361.2016.v8i1.3633-3645 |
A4 |
2015 |
A university hospital’s CSSD had two floors and the transportation of materials was carried out by ramp from one floor to another, which subjected nursing team members to a heavy burden with repercussions for their health. The lack of resources was expressed by the participants as one of the main reasons for occupational stress. Ignorance on the CSSD work and care with the dispensing of materials increases the risk of contamination in the CSSD. The high physical effort at work is seen as something positive for workers, although it poses serious health risks. Good interpersonal relationships help workers to overcome the difficulties of working at CSSD. |
10.12957/reuerj.2015.15934 |
A5 |
2015 |
Nursing team members characterized the daily work at CSSD of a private hospital in the state of Rio Grande do Sul as a risk to their health, as they were exposed to the handling of sharp materials poorly dispensed by other hospital sectors and excessive noise caused by the machinery and transport of materials. The use of products in the cleaning, chemical disinfection and sterilization of instruments was something that worried nursing team members, as well as exposure to high temperatures from autoclave piping. |
10.5935/1415-2762.20150067 |
A6 |
2014 |
Twenty-two nursing team members from two hospitals in the countryside of the state of Pernambuco participated in the research. Eighteen worked 48 hours a week at CSSD and 16 were paid 1 to 2 minimum wages. Thirteen suffered occupational accidents, the most frequent being injuries from sharp objects (5) and autoclave burns (4). 91.9% of respondents stated that their work environment presented a risk of fire, and 89.2% indicated a risk of contact with chemical substance and exposure to noise. Risk of falling materials, injury from sharps and fatigue was mentioned by 86.5% of respondents. |
10.4322/sobecc.2014.023 |
A7 |
2014 |
A strategy for quantifying the average daily workload in the CSSD was developed. This strategy was built from the reclassification of packages according to the quantity of materials (in XS, S, M, L and XL) and according to their complexity (in simple or complex); the measurement of the average time for processing these packages, excluding the time when the packages were not under direct handling by nursing team members. An average processing time was achieved for each of the 10 types of packages, which varied between 3 minutes for XS Simple packages and 29 minutes and 34 seconds for Complex SL packages. |
10.4322/sobecc.2014.008 |
A8 |
2013 |
Surgical Center and CSSD nursing team members of a public hospital in the state of Rio Grande do Sul knew the stages of washing and preparing the materials, although a CSSD interviewee did not know how to explain the washing process. Few remembered the material inspection process and some (apparently from the Surgical Center) did not know how to describe the sterilization steps and the storage of the surgical material. Few mentioned the control of the indication process and, of those who mentioned, some were confused about the reference of the ribbon color. Inadequacies in physical structure, intense work pace and health risks were addressed. Continuing education was mentioned as a strategy to overcome problems. |
10.1590/S0104-07072013000300016 |
A9 |
2013 |
Following a classification of packages according to the quantity of materials (in XS, S, M, L and XL) and according to their complexity (in simple, S, or complex, C), the quantities of processed packages were measured over 122 days by CSSD nursing team members of a university hospital. XSS packages varied between 49 and 829 per day in July, Tuesday was the day of the week that had the most packages processed and the average production was 657 packages per day. |
10.5216/ree.v15i1.17314 |
A10 |
2013 |
Some of the activities that nursing team members perform the most in the CSSD daily are supervision of activities performed at the unit (96.78%) and confirmation of the schedule of surgeries, checking the availability of materials and sterile clothing (93.56%). Weekly: monitoring and assessment of maintenance on materials and equipment (25.80%); and tests with products, supplies and equipment (25.80%). Monthly: training (61.30%); and productivity control of the unit (61.30%). Rarely: research development (48.39%) and definition of programs for the prevention of occupational risks and worker safety (35.50%). Never: research development (41.94%) and supervision and control of the use and collection of consignment materials (35.48%). |
10.1590/S0104-07072013000400008 |
A11 |
2012 |
Nursing assistants and technicians who worked at a CSSD of a hospital in Rio Grande do Sul showed job satisfaction, although they recognized the physical, biological and chemical risks it offered. High temperatures and poor ventilation were the most cited problems. Interpersonal relationships with managers and staff from other sectors also created problems. Dialogue between managers and workers at the top of the CSSD was the solution pointed out by participants. Regular walks, use of personal protective equipment, immunization and adequate hydration were identified as self-care strategies. |
10.1590/S1983-14472012000100016 |
A12 |
2011 |
At the end of the content validation process, six work areas were identified, containing a total of 25 sub-processes with 110 activities of the nursing team. In addition, 28 specific activities of the CSSD nurse were identified. |
10.1590/S0103-21002011000200015 |
A13 |
2011 |
CSSD nursing team members of a hospital in Paraíba understood continuing education as a means to gather new knowledge and, thus, improve the quality of service and increase safety in actions and personal satisfaction at work. They also highlighted the need for updating, lack of materials, adequate physical structure and contingent of workers, which lead them to excessive workload. |
https://revista.sobecc.org.br/sobecc/article/view/210/pdf-a
|
A14 |
2011 |
CSSD nursing team members of a hospital in São Paulo attributed the importance of their work to assisting service users, mainly to their role in controlling infections and the quality of materials and the fact that they made surgical procedures feasible. However, the participants believed that workers from other sectors of the hospital did not value them and did not know the work performed by the CSSD nursing technician. Teamwork, investment in training and good management were highlighted as the main facilitators of the work at CSSD. Insufficient materials, problems in decision-making are the main obstacles. |
https://revista.sobecc.org.br/sobecc/article/view/196/pdf-a
|
A15 |
2011 |
CSSD nursing team members of a hospital in Goiânia identified collaboration, proactivity and ethics as the main driving forces of the Self and stress, demotivation and distrust as self-restraints. As the main driving forces of the Other, the team’s integration, motivation and competence were pointed out, and stress, disorganization and irresponsibility were restricted to the Other. As the main driving forces of the environment were air conditioning, the physical structure and availability of protective equipment and as restrictive of the environment the deficit of equipment and supplies, absence of bathroom and resting place in the sector and insufficient workers. |
10.1590/S0080-62342011000500022 |
A16 |
2010 |
From interviews with CSSD nurse managers/supervisors from three large public hospitals in Rio de Janeiro, five categories emerged: “Managing the CSSD”; “Living the reality: discovering problems related to human resources”; “Overcoming difficulties (making the job work)”; “Dreaming of the ideal CSSD”; and “Going back to the real: striving for quality through meaning”. |
10.1590/S0034-71672010000300007 |
A17 |
2008 |
From interviews with CSSD nurse managers/supervisors from three large public hospitals in Rio de Janeiro, five categories emerged: “Managing the CSSD”; “Living the reality: discovering problems related to human resources”; “Overcoming difficulties (making the job work)”; “Dreaming of the ideal CSSD”; and “Going back to the real: striving for quality through meaning”. |
https://faenf.cayetano.edu.pe/images/pdf/Revistas/2008/febrero/Indicadores_de_la_calidad_de_vida_en.pdf
|
A18 |
2008 |
Nurses from clinical and surgical inpatient units in a public and a private hospital located in the city of Rio de Janeiro related the nurse’s work in the CSSD to management activities. They and associate it with the quality of care provided to clients, although they have declared that they do not know the technical role of a nurse in the CSSD. Participants admit that the view of working in CSSD is often negative, a sector that is known for allocating so-called problematic employees and for not being executed with service users. |
http://www.facenf.uerj.br/v16n3/v16n3a13.pdf
|
A19 |
2008 |
Undergraduate nursing students at an educational institution in Curitiba were unaware of the nurse’s work at CSSD. Right after a class on working at CSSD, students were able to describe the object, purpose and instruments of work at CSSD and the role of nurses in the sector, as well as its importance for the quality of care provided by the institution. |
10.4025/cienccuidsaude.v7i4.6674 |
A20 |
2007 |
From interviews with nursing assistants and technicians from the CSSD of a hospital in Londrina, four categories that configure the general structure of the phenomenon ‘Being a nursing team member at CSSD’ are: ‘Speaking of joining CSSD ‘, in which some pointed out that they did not choose to work at the unit and that they entered without knowing it well and because they contracted pathologies that prevented direct care to users; ‘Talking about the work developed at CSSD, which addresses the turnover of workers in the different sectors of the CSSD; ‘Experiencing difficulties’, which addresses the repetition of work in the CSSD, physical tiredness and work overload; and ‘Overcoming obstacles’, which deals with the feeling of usefulness and importance of their work as a tool to overcome difficulties. |
10.1590/S0080-62342007000400019 |
A21 |
2007 |
CSSD nursing team members of a hospital specializing in orthopedics in São Paulo had problems involving the osteoconjunctive system and muscle tissue as the main work-related health complaint and chronic complaint and as the main acute health complaint problems involving the circulatory system. The main causes of work-related health problems were excessive weight manipulation and demands from the management, while the main cause not related to work was old age. |
http://www.periodicos.uem.br/ojs/index.php/CiencCuidSaude/article/download/4980/3229
|
A22 |
2007 |
CSSD nurses from hospitals, clinics and sterilization companies and higher education teachers from Curitiba, after group discussion, identified how the nurse’s work object in the CSSD are ‘Team’ and ‘Material processing’, as purposes ‘Ensuring the quality of the services provided and the team’, ‘Indirect patient care’ and ‘Search, improvement and application of new technologies’ and as instruments’ Knowledge technologies’,’ Communication technologies and interpersonal relationships’ and ‘Information technologies planning’. |
10.1590/S0103-21002007000400014 |
A23 |
2006 |
CSSD nurses from Campinas hospitals identified management as their main activity, which involves planning, preparing administrative and operational instruments, managing material and personnel resources, and supervising. Research activities have not been reported. The relationship between their work and health care was characterized as indirect care, as a subsidy for quality and safety for assistance to users of health services. |
10.1590/S0080-62342006000300014 |
A24 |
2006 |
CSSD nurses from hospitals in the city of Campinas attributed a positive value to their work and reported realizing that workers from other sectors attribute a negative value to their work in the CSSD. The nurse’s work is identified with the management of the CSSD and processing medical and hospital materials work was perceived as non-routine and inconvenient. |
http://seer.ufrgs.br/RevistaGauchadeEnfermagem/article/download/4604/2524
|
A25 |
2005 |
CSSD workers from two public hospitals in the city of Goiânia who had no training in nursing or any training or technical-scientific training in asepsis and antisepsis or notions of microbiology and biosafety occupied 20% of the contingent of workers in the sector. The most frequent previous occupations were ‘sanitation and hospital cleaning services’ and ‘concierge services’. The nursing heads of the institutions admitted all. |
10.1590/S0080-62342005000200007 |
A26 |
2004 |
Of the 55 nursing team members, sterilization assistants and nursing students from the city of São José dos Campos who participated in a Continuing Education (CE) activity on working at CSSD, 19 claimed to have participated in some CE activity at CSSD, 16 previously participated upon entering the CSSD and 13 of these continued to be updated. 57.9% of workers stated that participation in CE activities was voluntary, while the others reported having been obliged to participate. Most workers pointed out that they only participate in CE activities when new equipment is purchased and that CSSD nurses are responsible for the initiative to carry out these activities. |
10.1590/S0104-11692004000500010 |
A27 |
2019 |
CSSD workers in the state of Piauí addressed the chemical, biological and physical risks involved in their work, the necessary care and institutional support to deal with these risks. |
10.9789/2175-5361.2019.v11i5.1161-1166 |
A28 |
2019 |
In Suzhou, China, nurses are responsible for all health product processing functions and unit management. Nurses in their first year of work at CSSD made more packaging kit errors (39.9%) than nurses in their second to fifth year of work (33.8%) and that nurses in their sixth year of work at onwards (26.3%). Nurses with five years or more of work can take on management and quality control functions. |
10.1186/s12913-019-4007-3 |
A29 |
2018 |
CSSD nursing team members in the city of Uberlândia demonstrated moderate levels of good work-related quality of life. The aspects with the lowest level of satisfaction were related to remuneration and working conditions, whereas those with the highest level were those related to the use of skills and social integration at work. |
10.14393/BJ-v34n1a2018-38940 |