Guest guest Posted April 23, 2004 Report Share Posted April 23, 2004 " Hospitals Blamed for HBV Spread " Daily Yomiuri (04/20/04) P. 2 Researchers at the Japanese Health, Labor, and Welfare Ministry are attributing at least 30 percent of all mother-to-child hepatitis B infections in the country to the failure of doctors to administer the proper preventive treatment at the time of birth. Since 1986, the ministry has required medical institutions to test pregnant women for the virus and to give infants both antiviral medicine and the hepatitis B vaccine immediately following birth if the mother is infected. While these procedures have substantially decreased the number of mother-to-child infections since that time, a survey conducted by the ministry found that a number of institutions are failing to follow through with the routine, resulting in 12 out of the 41 mother-to-child infections reported in 2000 and noted in the study. The research team is recommending that obstetricians and pediatricians take more steps to ensure the proper procedures are being followed at the appropriate times to help prevent the further spread of the virus from mothers to their babies Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2004 Report Share Posted April 23, 2004 " Hospitals Blamed for HBV Spread " Daily Yomiuri (04/20/04) P. 2 Researchers at the Japanese Health, Labor, and Welfare Ministry are attributing at least 30 percent of all mother-to-child hepatitis B infections in the country to the failure of doctors to administer the proper preventive treatment at the time of birth. Since 1986, the ministry has required medical institutions to test pregnant women for the virus and to give infants both antiviral medicine and the hepatitis B vaccine immediately following birth if the mother is infected. While these procedures have substantially decreased the number of mother-to-child infections since that time, a survey conducted by the ministry found that a number of institutions are failing to follow through with the routine, resulting in 12 out of the 41 mother-to-child infections reported in 2000 and noted in the study. The research team is recommending that obstetricians and pediatricians take more steps to ensure the proper procedures are being followed at the appropriate times to help prevent the further spread of the virus from mothers to their babies Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2004 Report Share Posted April 23, 2004 " Hospitals Blamed for HBV Spread " Daily Yomiuri (04/20/04) P. 2 Researchers at the Japanese Health, Labor, and Welfare Ministry are attributing at least 30 percent of all mother-to-child hepatitis B infections in the country to the failure of doctors to administer the proper preventive treatment at the time of birth. Since 1986, the ministry has required medical institutions to test pregnant women for the virus and to give infants both antiviral medicine and the hepatitis B vaccine immediately following birth if the mother is infected. While these procedures have substantially decreased the number of mother-to-child infections since that time, a survey conducted by the ministry found that a number of institutions are failing to follow through with the routine, resulting in 12 out of the 41 mother-to-child infections reported in 2000 and noted in the study. The research team is recommending that obstetricians and pediatricians take more steps to ensure the proper procedures are being followed at the appropriate times to help prevent the further spread of the virus from mothers to their babies Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2004 Report Share Posted April 23, 2004 " Hospitals Blamed for HBV Spread " Daily Yomiuri (04/20/04) P. 2 Researchers at the Japanese Health, Labor, and Welfare Ministry are attributing at least 30 percent of all mother-to-child hepatitis B infections in the country to the failure of doctors to administer the proper preventive treatment at the time of birth. Since 1986, the ministry has required medical institutions to test pregnant women for the virus and to give infants both antiviral medicine and the hepatitis B vaccine immediately following birth if the mother is infected. While these procedures have substantially decreased the number of mother-to-child infections since that time, a survey conducted by the ministry found that a number of institutions are failing to follow through with the routine, resulting in 12 out of the 41 mother-to-child infections reported in 2000 and noted in the study. The research team is recommending that obstetricians and pediatricians take more steps to ensure the proper procedures are being followed at the appropriate times to help prevent the further spread of the virus from mothers to their babies Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.