Thursday, March 26, 2009

Miami clonoscopies

Unsterile equipment used on Miami veterans
More than 3,000 who had colonoscopies at VA hospital told to get HIV tests
INTERACTIVE

Fact file
Health care & costs, by the numbers

Most popular
• Most viewed • Top rated • Most e-mailed

Is ‘people food’ ever OK? 7 pet myths debunked
AIG exec turns in resignation ... in NY Times
Octuplet mom once worked as a stripper
Geithner to propose massive regulatory reform
It's fear that keeps Baghdad's peace
Most viewed on msnbc.com
Fireman dresses as Spider-Man to rescue boy
Parrot gets award for warning about choking tot
Mean dogs, few escapes at Idaho prison
Rare hand transplant performed on Marine
Beer kegs help keep zoo animals happy
Most viewed on msnbc.com

What's Obama's policy on health insurance? See if he's keeping his word, and vote on his progress during the first 100 days.

updated 5:53 p.m. ET, Mon., March. 23, 2009
MIAMI - Officials say more than 3,000 patients at a Veterans Affairs hospital in Miami had colonoscopies with equipment that wasn’t properly sterilized

They’ve been told they should be tested for HIV and other diseases.

The VA insists the risk of infection is minimal and only involved tubing on equipment, not any device that actually touched a patient. But it’s the second recent announcement of errors during colonoscopies at VA facilities.

Last month, more than 6,000 patients at a clinic in Tennessee were told they may have been exposed to infectious body fluids during colonoscopies.

The VA also said 1,800 veterans treated at an ear, nose and throat clinic in Augusta, Ga., were alerted they could have been exposed to an infection due to improper disinfection of an instrument.

No comments: