Sharps injuries expose healthcare workers to bloodborne pathogens including hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and HIV, with transmission risk varying from 30 per cent for hepatitis B (unvaccinated) to 0.3 per cent for HIV per percutaneous exposure. Australia records thousands of needlestick and sharps injuries annually, many of which go unreported. The new Healthcare Code of Practice commencing February 2026 requires healthcare PCBUs to implement safety-engineered devices, establish sharps disposal systems, and maintain exposure incident management procedures. This template covers all sharps handling activities with controls mapped to the binding codes effective 1 July 2026.
WHS Regulation 2025 Part 7.1 — Hazardous Chemicals (biological); Part 4.1 — Infection Control
Work involving biological hazards (bloodborne pathogens)
Healthcare Code of Practice 2026 (binding 1 July 2026 under Section 26A)
Yes — Healthcare code binding July 2026. Non-compliance is a standalone offence.
| Hazard | Consequence | Likelihood |
|---|---|---|
| Needlestick injury during injection, blood draw, or needle recapping | Hepatitis B/C transmission, HIV transmission | Possible |
| Scalpel blade injury during surgical procedures and disposal | Deep laceration, bloodborne pathogen exposure | Possible |
| Sharps injury from improperly disposed items in waste or linen | Unexpected percutaneous exposure, psychological distress | Possible |
| Sharps container overfilling leading to injury during disposal | Needlestick from protruding sharps, contamination | Possible |
| Splash exposure during sharps-related procedures | Mucosal bloodborne pathogen exposure | Possible |
Multiple sharps injuries reported over 12 months without implementation of safety-engineered devices. Hospital continued to use conventional needles despite availability of safety alternatives.
2023 — SafeWork NSW Prosecution Database
Our WHS consultants develop sharps management SWMS with safety device specifications and PEP protocols for your healthcare setting.
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