Munoz, DeFuccio bill limiting surgical smoke exposure goes to governor’s desk

Munoz, DeFuccio bill limiting surgical smoke exposure goes to governor’s desk

Nancy Munoz

TRENTON, N.J. – Legislation protecting health care workers from surgical smoke exposure advanced to the governor’s desk on Thursday after passing the full Assembly.

Sponsored by Assemblywomen Nancy Munoz and DeAnne DeFuccio, the bill (A256) requires certain health care facilities to use smoke evacuation systems in operating rooms.

“This is an encouraging step toward eliminating an unnecessary health risk for surgical room staff,” Munoz (R-Union) said. “Surgical smoke poses problems for pregnant women and health consequences for workers who have prolonged exposure. New Jersey’s health care professionals deserve smoke-free, healthy workplaces.”

Surgical smoke, a byproduct of tissue destruction during certain procedures, can contain toxic gasses and vapors and may disseminate infectious pathogens, according to research. Advocates say inhaling surgical smoke for one day in the operating room is the same as smoking up to 30 cigarettes. Exposure can lead to headaches, eye irritation, cough, sore throat, nausea, drowsiness, dizziness, sneezing, and more.

DeAnne DeFuccio

“Smoke evacuation systems are an investment in the long-term wellbeing of our health care workers. This bill makes sure that all health care workers can benefit from smoke evacuation systems and considers the safety of staff in addition to patients,” DeFuccio (R-Bergen) said.

A study by the Journal of American Medical Association found only 14% of operating room workers use smoke evacuation systems. Nine states – Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Rhode Island, Oregon and Washington – have adopted similar legislation.

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