WORLD / Health
Needle sticks endanger surgeons-in-training
(Reuters)   
Updated: 2007-06-28 11:33 
BOSTON - Surgeons in training are accidentally stuck with a potentially   
contaminated needle once every seven months, increasing the risk that    
they will develop AIDS or hepatitis, US researchers reported on Wednesday. 
Surgeons in a file photo. Surgeons in training are accidentally stuck   
with a potentially contaminated needle once every seven months,    
increasing the risk that they will develop AIDS or hepatitis, US    
researchers reported on Wednesday. [Reuters] 
Many do not bother to report it, the researchers said in the New England   
Journal of Medicine. 
If reported immediately and treated within 24 hours, the chance of   
getting the AIDS virus following a needlestick from an infected patient    
is almost zero, said Martin Makary of the Johns Hopkins University School    
of Medicine in Baltimore. 
Half of the surgical residents failed to report such injuries to their   
employee health center, usually saying they were too busy. Two-thirds of    
the injuries were self-inflicted, often while putting in stitches. 
Even when doctors were treating high-risk patients, they failed to report   
the needlestick in 16 percent of the cases. 
Male doctors, those who had been stuck frequently before, and surgeons   
who knew that nobody else had seen them get stuck were the least likely    
to report the incident, the researchers found. 
Doctors "don't talk about it," said Makary. "There's no public reporting   
system they're part of, no focus groups, no chat rooms. This is something    
people keep to themselves and, understandably, they don't want the    
stigma. There's some degree of humiliation involved" when you have to    
acknowledge that you made a mistake. 
And the treatment itself "takes a huge toll on someone, especially when   
you're working 30- and 36-hour shifts routinely each week. It's a    
stressful job, long hours, high responsibility," and the medicine you    
have to take for a month to prevent illness produces nausea, said Makary.    
"That's a bad combination." 
He said the system puts surgeons in training at risk because "we tend to   
put our most vulnerable and least-trained surgeons on the front lines of    
battle" doing simple surgical procedures on the patients that are the    
most likely to be infected with hepatitis B, hepatitis C and the AIDS    
virus. 
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health has tracked   
thousands of needlestick injuries that are reported, and infection rates    
vary. An estimated 0.3 percent of healthcare workers get HIV from a    
needle stick and up to 30 percent are infected with hepatitis B after    
such a stick. 
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