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3 VA Hospital Patients Test Positive to HIV After Clinic Mistakes
Posted on April 21, 2009

Veterans Issues Danny "Greasy" Belcher, Executive Director
Task Force Omega of KY Inc.
Vietnam Infantry Sgt. 68-69
"D" Troop 7th Sqdn. 1st Air Cav

When I have surgery, I make it clear that I want NO blood transfusions or blood products. I know that the medical people think I was being silly. My friend, Gary Clark died some years ago. He died from AIDS after he received bad blood at the UK Hospital in Lexington, KY. No, he was not queer or an IV drug user. He was hemophilic and asked about the blood since he had read about AIDS in blood in Africa. He was told not to worry and that the blood here was safe. Later on he was told,"sorry but you are HIV positive."

Maybe the VA Hospitals need to do HIV testing on ALL veterans who have had procedures in the past where the HIV virus may have entered them. This would rule out any "mistakes" that may have been made and endangered the life of our veterans.

----- Original Message -----
From: Nicholas Rock
To: Nicholas Rock
Sent: Monday, April 20, 2009 10:30 PM
Subject: Vets News -A- for 4-20-09

VA: 3 patients HIV-positive after clinic mistakes By BILL POOVEY, Associated Press Writer

Saturday, April 18, 2009 (04-18) 06:58 PDT Chattanooga, Tenn. (AP) --

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2009/04/17/national/a132541D72.DTL

Three patients exposed to contaminated medical equipment at Veterans Affairs hospitals have tested positive for HIV, the agency said Friday.

Initial tests show one patient each from VA medical facilities in Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Augusta, Ga.; and Miami has the virus that causes AIDS, according to a VA statement.

The three cases included one positive HIV test reported earlier this month, but the VA didn't identify the facility involved at the time.

The patients are among more than 10,000 getting tested because they were treated with endoscopic equipment that wasn't properly sterilized and exposed them to other people's body fluids.

Vietnam veteran Samuel Mendes, 60, said he was surprised to learn of an HIV case linked to the Miami facility, where he had a colonoscopy. He was told he wasn't among those at risk.

"I was hoping and expecting to not get anyone contaminated like that," he said. "It's probably a little worse than we thought."

The VA also said there have been six positive tests for the hepatitis B virus and 19 positive tests for hepatitis C at the three locations.

There's no way to prove patients were exposed to the viruses at its facilities, the agency said.

"These are not necessarily linked to any endoscopy issues and the evaluation continues," the statement said.

The VA has said it does not yet know if veterans treated with the same kind of equipment at its other 150 hospitals may have been exposed to the same mistake before the department had a nationwide safety training campaign.

An agency spokeswoman has said the mistake with the equipment was corrected nationwide by the time the campaign ended March 14. The problems discovered in December date back more than five years at the Murfreesboro and Miami hospitals.

The VA's disclosure Friday was the department's first comment since April 3, when the VA reported the one positive HIV test.

VA spokeswoman Katie Roberts has declined to provide any details on how widespread the problems might have been other than saying a review of the situation continues.

She said in an e-mail Friday that "there is a very small risk of harm to patients from the procedures at each site." She said the HIV results "still need to be verified" in additional tests.

The VA statement shows the number of "potentially affected" patients totals 10,797, including 6,387 who had colonoscopies at Murfreesboro, 3,341 who had colonoscopies at Miami and 1,069 who were treated at the ear, nose and throat clinic at Augusta.

More than 5,400 patients, about half of those at risk, have been notified of their follow-up test results, the VA said.

The Friday statement said the VA is "continuing to notify individuals whose letters have been returned as undeliverable, and working with homeless coordinators to reach veterans with no known home address."

The statement also said the VA has assigned more than 100 employees at the three locations to "ensure that affected veterans receive prompt testing and appropriate counseling."

All three sites used endoscopic equipment made by Olympus American Inc., which has said in a statement it is helping the VA address problems with "inadvertently neglecting to appropriately reprocess a specific auxiliary water tube."

Charles Rollins, 62, who served three tours in Vietnam with the Navy from 1966 to 1969, said the news concerns him because he's used the Augusta ear, nose and throat clinic several times.

"That's terrible," he said by phone as he socialized at an American Legion post in Augusta.

Associated Press writers Lisa Orkin in Miami and Dorie Turner in Atlanta contributed to this report.

 
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