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Preview of Bloodborne Pathogens Exposure Response Poster
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Bloodborne Pathogens Exposure Response Poster

A single-page wall reference for the exact post-exposure procedure required by OSHA’s Bloodborne Pathogens Standard (29 CFR 1910.1030). Six sequential steps: wash or flush immediately, report the exposure, identify and test the source individual, baseline the exposed worker, offer post-exposure prophylaxis per current U.S. Public Health Service recommendations (with the time-critical 2-hour HIV PEP and 24-hour HBV PEP windows), and obtain the healthcare professional’s written opinion within 15 days. Each step cites the exact CFR subsection (§1910.1030(d) and §1910.1030(f)) and the poster carries the CDC PEPline (1-888-448-4911) so an exposed worker can get expert consultation any time, day or night.

What’s inside

  • All six required post-exposure steps in OSHA-mandated order: wash, report, identify/test source, baseline exposed worker, offer PEP, written opinion within 15 days.
  • Every step cites the exact 29 CFR 1910.1030 subsection so it doubles as a compliance reference for infection-control coordinators and DOIs.
  • Includes the time-critical PEP windows (HIV within 2 hours, HBV within 24 hours) and the 15-day written opinion deadline.
  • Lists the CDC NCEZID PEPline (1-888-448-4911) on every print for 24/7 post-exposure consultation.
  • Sized for clinic exam rooms, dental operatories, EMS bays, and first-aid stations on standard 8.5×11 paper.
Pages
1
Format
Portrait · US Letter (8.5×11)
Language
English

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Preview

One-page printable — preview below.

Bloodborne Pathogens Exposure Response Poster — page 1
Page 1

Regulatory basis

This printable summarises the requirements of the following federal regulation. Always consult the source text for the controlling language.

Citation
29 CFR § 1910.1030
Title
Bloodborne pathogens
Applies to
All occupational exposure to blood or other potentially infectious materials, as defined in § 1910.1030(b).

How to use this printable

  1. 1

    Hang where the hazard happens

    Post near loading docks, outdoor break areas, or wherever the risk shows up — not just the HR office.

  2. 2

    Laminate for jobsite use

    High-contrast type and bold hex callouts stay readable under glare and laminate sheets.

  3. 3

    Refresh seasonally

    Rotate heat-illness posters in spring, cold-stress in fall — fresh signage reads more than stale signage.

Editorial review

Last reviewed · BlueHive editorial review

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