Guest guest Posted November 6, 2006 Report Share Posted November 6, 2006 Dear Forum, In a previous contribution, Mariette Correa asked what people can do to promote safe care. This contribution responds to her question. The IPEN study of injection practices acknowledges common unsafe injections. Many other health care procedures are often unsafe due to reuse of unsterile instruments. Why has the public been so silent about risks to contract HIV from health care? Part of the problem may be widespread misinformation about HIV’s ability to survive outside the body. HIV can survive for hours when dry (Resnick et al, JAMA 1986; 255: 1887-1891), and for weeks in a damp environment, such as inside a used syringe or multidose vial (Abdala et al, J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 1999; 20: 73-80). Also, many people believe that the risk to transmit HIV through reused unsterile syringes and needles is only 0.3%. This is the risk for nurses to contract HIV from an average needlestick accident. However, 93% of needlestick accidents are shallow scratches. For deep needlesticks (deep enough for the needle’s hole to be within the skin as in an injection) the average risk may be estimated at 2.3% (see: Cardo et al. N Eng J Med 1997; 337: 1542-43; Gisselquist et al. Infect Contro Hosp Epidemiol 2006; 27: 944-952). Health care providers – even the most committed – have competing interests, limited budgets, etc. They will always have reasons – excuses – for not providing safe care. So what’s the public to do? If the public wants safe care, they need to communicate their priorities. There may be many ways to do this. Here are some suggestions: (i) Individually, patients can demand safe care when they go for treatment. For example, they can insist on new disposable equipment. If equipment is reused, they can ask that it be sterilized or at least boiled. These options don’t work for everyone, because some patients don’t have the courage to speak up – even to save their lives. (ii) Collectively – with support from newspapers, courts, and an NGO or two – patients and the public can demand investigations of unexplained HIV infections. Unexplained infections are all over in India: HIV-infected children with HIV-negative mothers, HIV-positive wives with HIV-negative husbands, etc. Yet there have been no investigations to trace these infections to their source clinic, and to test other patients to find all related infections. Without such investigations, clinics that are careless may continue to pump HIV infections into the community. (iii) Collectively, people can arrange for organizations (district governments? NGOs? others?) to accept and respond to complaints about unsafe practices. As things stand now, state health officials say they can’t do anything if patients report unsafe injections at X clinic. How can this be changed, so that careless practices can be reported and stopped? Gisselquist Email: <david_gisselquist@...> 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.