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Lifestyle :: Art/Leisure :: Safety & the Art of Tattoo :: Plastic Wrap is NOT A BANDAGE

Plastic Wrap is NOT A BANDAGE

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I just can't believe what I see on the streets...people walking around with fresh tattoos covered with plastic wrap. It's a cheap boot out the door from a person that you have trusted your health to. Instead of the educated practice of covering a wound with an absorbant material many are taking the pake route and using three cents worth of plastic wrap instead. Is your tattoo a sandwich? Has the tattooer NOT read our state's regulations requiring absorbant bandage material?

plastic wrap
A true professional would NEVER use this on a trusting client. That pink pigment leaking out contains body fluids. Does this person carry Hep B/C? HIV? HPV?

proper
Absorbant bandaging properly taped. A professional finish that all tattoo clients deserve.

Through education we understand STANDARD PRECAUTIONS which state that ALL body fluids are considered contaminated and thus must be contained. As I see plasma seeping down the arms, ankles and shoulders of unknowing clients I just cringe.

When choosing a tattooer not only look at their art but ask them about their practices. What do they bandage with? If they say 'plastic wrap' in any part of the answer excuse yourself and keep looking.

mrsa
A poor client who's fresh tattoo allowed MRSA into his tissue. This will require intense medical treatment. Bacteria love warm open skin. Plastic wrap bandaging is their best friend.

The Article:

The use of plastic wrap to cover fresh tattoos may have gotten its start at biker events years ago. I can remember first seeing it used in the '70's. Newly tattooed people were peeling off their bandages to show their bros their new ink so untrained artists came up with the 'see-through' idea of plastic wrap. No need to peel that bandage back anymore. Blood, body fluids and their inherent dangers weren't much of an issue (or so we thought) in those days.

Unfortunately some of our uneducated brethren today fail to see the dangers and continue this error-filled practice. I've seen it 'recommended' in a supposedly comprehensive 'how-to tattoo' book that is far too widely distributed to contain this erroneous information. (a 'how-to' book on tattooing is like a home tonsillectomy kit....don't try it!)

The problem is that plastic wrap creates an occlusive seal meaning that no air gets in or out. That skin surface builds up body temperatures to nearly 103 degrees which is a perfect breeding ground for bacteria. Your tattoo has just been turned into a petri dish for bacterial growth. Nice, huh?

CARE TO RUB ON SOMEONE'S BODY FLUIDS?

With the elevated body temperature the pores remain open and allow more seepage of body fluids than normal. With no absorbent surface these fluids must go somewhere and gravity takes them to the bottom of the plastic wrap. Body fluids leak out and drip OFF the body or when the client brushes against surfaces or other people thus creating a contaminated field. Putting a paper towel at the base of the 'wrap' to catch this fluid does nothing to stop the oozing open pores and the temperature build up.

I recently visited a neighboring studio and witnessed a plastic wrapped client sitting in their waiting room with body fluids running down his arm onto a fabric sofa. Talk about a contamination danger!! UGH!! If such an unfortunate individual enters our shop with his 'wrap' we ask him politely to leave as we do not want their fluids on our floors, chairs, racks, counters or any other surface he may come in contact with. I also give them a copy of this article to take back to their artists who are obviously not educated about blood borne pathogens or proper customer care.

At no time is plastic wrap applied to the skin an option. Not even for a temporary 'break' during a tattoo session. If a client needs to step outside for smoke a paper towel or other absorbent material should be applied to the skin. A little water will quickly lift it from the skin surface when the session continues.

The only proper use of plastic wrap in a studio is for a surface barrier. Using it for countertop or bottle wraps is correct....never on skin!

STATE REGULATIONS

We are fortunate here in Hawaii to have an excellent set of regulations regarding tattooing. Hawaii Department of Health Regulation 11-17-10-H states that after a tattoo: "the entire area is covered with a piece of sterile dressing"

Not only is the use of plastic wrap illegal in most regulated states it is also a cheap insult to a client who deserves a better start with their new tattoo! What price is proper bandaging? How do you put a dollar sign on contamination or better yet the elimination of it? Tattooers have a tremendous responsibility to our/their clients and to the public in general to take every and all precautions we can to prevent any chance of cross contamination.

Use of plastic wrap is forbidden at many quality tattoo conventions. The National Tattoo Association
(www.nationaltattooassociation.com) and the Alliance of Professional Tattooists (www.safe-tattoos.com) have both outlawed it's use at their shows. All convention promoters need to educate themselves and make this ban an industry wide policy. Studios need to brush up on their blood borne pathogens education and take a good look at their own practices of proper procedure and quality customer aftercare.

We have a moral obligation to give our clients what they deserve.... our very best.


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Comments

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Bigislander72 — Monday, April 18, 2011
reportreply
http://www.acep.org/content.aspx?id=40462 Better set these guys straight then. If you go completely by the books on regs, it says it must be coverved with "sterile gauze", so even a Telfa pad is out. I think "sterile dressing" will suffice, and according to the information in the article written by medical professionals, plastic wrap IS a sterile dressing.


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Noel — Saturday, July 30, 2011
reportreply
Hi, I went to that site. They are talking specifically about burn victim's wounds, and only for the duration of transport to the hospital. At least that's how I understand it "Plastic wrap is sufficiently clean for first-aid and prehospital use to dress burn wounds that will promptly receive medical attention, especially if freshly exposed film is used," he wrote. (a wound dressing usually is only for a brief period of time, lasting a few hours at most.)


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psucher — Sunday, July 31, 2011
reportreply
Under no circumstances can plastic wrap be considered sterile. Look at it's packaging! Sterile material has undergone treatment to render it free of bacteria, viruses, molds and their spores and then kept in a proper package to avoid contamination. A roll of saran wrap is anything but. I stand my grounds...plastic wrap is a CHEAP excuse no matter regs or not. Our clients have come to us and trusted us with literally their lives. Do we not owe it to them to use the best products from needles, pigments, ointments to bandages? It is our moral and ethical obligation as educated tattooers to use the best. Period.



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