July 27, 2009 1:17 PM

VA: 16 Patients From Clinics Infected

(AP)  Veterans Affairs officials say 16 patients exposed to contaminated equipment at its medical facilities have tested positive for viral infections, including hepatitis.

VA spokeswoman Katie Roberts said Friday that 10 colonoscopy patients from the VA medical center in Murfreesboro, Tenn., tested positive for hepatitis. She said six patients from a VA clinic in Augusta, Ga., tested positive for unspecified viral infections.

The number of reported infections could rise. Roberts says the department doesn't yet have results from most of more than 10,000 veterans warned to get blood tests because they could have been exposed to contamination. Patients at a medical center in Miami also were urged to get tested.

All three sites failed to properly sterilize equipment between treatments.

"What if you had to worry about giving your wife AIDS?" said Wayne Craig, a 52-year-old U.S. Navy veteran who lives in Elora and had a colonoscopy at the VA's Alvin C. York Medical Center in Murfreesboro, near Nashville, about five years ago. "Why haven't I been notified within five years?"

After the VA declined to answer repeated requests from The Associated Press during the past week about the results of what the department described as a nationwide procedure and training review that was to end March 14, Roberts said Thursday that the evaluation of the review was continuing.

Roberts said she was confident that any other mistakes in operating endoscopic equipment at other VA facilities were corrected during the review. The VA has attributed the mistakes to human error.

The review of all VA medical centers and outpatient clinics followed reports in February that the department discovered "improperly reprocessed" endoscopic equipment used for colonoscopies in Murfreesboro and ear, nose and throat exams in Augusta, Ga.

Just this week, the VA acknowledged problems at a facility in Miami, too.

Veteran Gary Simpson, 57, of Spring City had a colonoscopy at the Murfreesboro clinic in 2007. He said his blood has tested negative for HIV and hepatitis, but he's still worried because a nurse told him some diseases don't show up for seven years.

"He talks about it every day," said his wife, Janice. "It has really messed with him a lot. It is just too disturbing."

Nashville lawyer Mike Sheppard said his firm is preparing to file claims on behalf of up to 15 colonoscopy patients, including several who have since tested positive for hepatitis B. He said an elderly man who had cancer when he had a colonoscopy died shortly afterward.

"We are investigating the death," Sheppard said.

According to a VA e-mail, only about half of the Murfreesboro and Augusta patients notified by letter of a mistake that exposed them to "potentially infectious fluids" have requested appointments for follow-up blood tests offered by the department.

In February, the VA said it sent letters offering the tests to about 6,400 patients who had colonoscopies between April 23, 2003, and Dec. 1, 2008, at Murfreesboro and to about 1,800 patients treated over 11 months last year at Augusta.

The VA has now sent letters advising 3,260 patients who had colonoscopies between May 2004 and March 12 at the Miami Veterans Affairs Healthcare System that they also should get tests for HIV, hepatitis and other infectious diseases.

That revelation prompted two Florida lawmakers to demand an investigation by the VA Office of Inspector General.

Dr. Mark Rupp, president of the Society of Health Care Epidemiology of America, said the risk of infection following routine endoscopic procedures is 1 in every 1 million to 2 million procedures.

Rupp, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, said that "tracking is very difficult" and that hospitals are not required to report mistakes that expose patients to infectious diseases.

"The people in the hospitals are encouraged to report," Rupp said. "If there is any kind of outbreak usually the Public Health Service is notified."

Roberts said the VA notified patients based on the installation date of equipment that was improperly operated.

Janice Simpson said an employee in U.S. Rep. Zach Wamp's office in Chattanooga told her that the blood test notices sent to colonoscopy patients of the Murfreesboro clinic were timed to the date of a procedure on a patient with AIDS. A spokeswoman for Wamp said Simpson was mistaken.

The VA did say in a March 19 e-mail to AP that at the VA's Murfreesboro colonoscopy facility "one of the tubes used for irrigation during the procedure had an incorrect valve." The statement also said "tubing attached to the scope was processed at the end of each day instead of between each patient as required by the manufacturer's instructions."

The VA letter to Craig said he "could have been exposed to body fluids from a previous patient." Craig said his follow-up test did not show any infection.

He said he thinks the VA was saving money by not cleaning the tubing between its use on each patient.

"What if this was a public hospital?" said Craig, who has six grandchildren. "There's no reason in the world a veteran can't file a suit against a veteran hospital the same as a public hospital. This is veterans you are talking about."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 25 Comments
by Onrete April 10, 2009 4:41 PM EDT
I had an appointment at the Vets clinic in Gaylord, MI for a sore shoulder on April 6 and I found out later when I saw the news that they lied to me about why I needed the HIV and HEP tests they gave me for "tendinitis." Filed for the test results immediately and now they are delaying them. All clinics use the same equipment, so I guess the VA is gonna try and keep this massive scandal secret, too. Blow the lid off off this for all our sakes. I'm willing to testify.
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by dstigler April 8, 2009 1:06 PM EDT
I am a disabled VietNam vet and have been using VA medical facilities for the past few years. While I can agree that I have only met two doctors who are from the USA, I can not complain about the level of service and treatment that I have received. Certainly there can be improvement in some areas but overall it is an outstanding system.
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by Ludwig_Von_Mises March 30, 2009 11:03 PM EDT
A question for the Canadian who loves his socialized medicine. Q: What was the name of the member of Parliament who contracted breast cancer last year and rather than go thru the socialized health care system - she got on an aeroplane and flew to Beverly Hills to have first-class care in the U-S? When your own pols leave system for the free-market , it's not exactly a ringing endorsement of a gov't. run program now, is it?
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by tbbaot March 29, 2009 12:12 PM EDT
Typical scenario when government gets in the business of healthcare. Those pining for universal healthcare need to dig deeper, as the VA is ripe with failure and similar stories abound.
Ask yourself why a doctor would work for the VA when they can make twice the money in private practice? The answer is the docs with poor skills end up with the government.
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by pensacola8-2009 March 27, 2009 10:44 PM EDT
The VA did catch their own error and properly communicated it to all concerned.

I feel that civilian hospitals do not possess that same level of integrity and are motivated by profit to deny patients access to the information without filing a lawsuit first.

Civilian hospitals do have their share of the medical errors and mishandled patient communications.
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by mje222 March 27, 2009 10:12 PM EDT
this is not funny, how can some of you make jokes? are vets should allways get the best of everything and have earn the right to be taken care of with the best care!we all owe them!
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by mje222 March 27, 2009 10:05 PM EDT
the a*s comment was for notmudroseiii
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by mje222 March 27, 2009 10:03 PM EDT
you are just an a*s
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by ellen5050 March 27, 2009 9:53 PM EDT
This is exactly what will happen to all healthcare if the government takes it over. WAKE UP AMERICA!!!!! My dr. husband worked in a VA Hospital (a good one) and he was constantly appalled at the apathy of the nurses and other workers--punch in and punch out, right on time. Crisis with a patient? Go to lunch anyway.

This particular malpractice is even more inexcusable because any one of us who's never had a day of nursing or medical school would know that that tubing has to be sterilized or discarded after every use. This is DISGUSTING, and LAZY. Or is it to "save money"?

What's even more appalling is that these workers did not imagine themselves or their loved ones in the shoes of the patient. This is shameful. But, the other problem with government healthcare (or any service) is that it's IMPOSSIBLE to fire people. The Stimulus Bill is going to create thousands of "Make Work" government jobs, they'll unionize, and nobody will EVER get rid of them for incompetency or lack of work.

BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR WITH NATIONAL GOVERNMENT HEALTHCARE!!
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by brainteaser2 March 27, 2009 8:33 PM EDT
evilbusheviks, You truly are a pathetic excuse for a person. How do you get off on deciding all doctors are stupid morons who's only motivation is money and working you over. And how about class rank - most of the people who were 1st in their class that I know usually couldn't even speak to patients because they were so out of it. Most people in this country should aim for someone in the bottom 1/3 of the class because they fully accept they don't know everything and are quite willing to admit it. Given that most of the rest of the world never sees a doctor in their lifetime we should all work with our physicians rather than make pathetic statements like yours.
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