Deccan Chronicle

36 p.c doctors end up with needle injuries, says study

- KANIZA GARARI | DC HYDERABAD, DEC. 25

Injuries due to needles and shrapnels are caused to the medical fraternity and these expose them to the blood-borne infections, Hepatitis B and other pathogens, according to a study carried out in the trauma centre in All India Institute of Medical Sciences.

The study found that 36 per cent of doctors, 14.6 per cent of nurses and 7 per cent of housekeepi­ng staff had accidental needle stick injuries.

India accounts for 30 per cent of the 16 billion injections administer­ed worldwide and it has been estimated that 63 per cent are unsafe injections. Injections are labelled unsafe due to improper sterilisat­ion, reuse and faulty administra­tion. These are found to be a major cause of infections in patients and doctors. The needle stick injuries expose healthcare workers to the blood-borne pathogens of which the highest number of cases are those of Hepatitis B and C.

Dr Vishnu Reddy of Yashoda Hospitals noted, “Needle stick injuries are common but a preventabl­e occupation­al hazard. Given the rising number of infections by such injuries, the focus is now on primary prevention which can eventually reduce the number of blood-borne pathogen infections.”

The incidence of Hepatitis B and C is high due to the reuse of syringes and needles. A senior doctor said, “We have patients who have not got themselves tested for Hepatitis B and C. When such cases are handled infections are easily passed not only to healthcare workers but also other copatients. The hospital-acquired infections have also got Hepatitis B as one major source and these incidences are being seen in patients. As we do not have a proper reporting system and most of them do not come back, the present data available is only on healthcare workers.”

Needle prick injury is an occupation­al hazard. World Health Organisati­on records state that accidental injuries are the cause of 37 per cent new Hepatitis B cases, 39 per cent new Hepatitis C cases and 5.5 per cent new HIV cases.

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