Study: H1N1 Workers Didn't Protect Selves
Study Finds That Nurses Who Became Ill Didn't Wear Gloves, Eye Protection
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A Centers for Disease Control study found that nurses and other healthcare workers did not wear adequate protection, such as masks and gloves, in the early days of the H1N1 (or swine flu) virus outbreak, beginning in April. At least 80 have become infected. (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye)
Researchers focused on 13 nurses and other health care workers who were likely infected at work in the early days of the U.S. outbreak. They found that only half always wore gloves, and even fewer routinely wore other protection around patients who might have the virus.
In late April - just as U.S. cases were first mounting - the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said health care workers should wear gloves, gowns, eye protection and respirator masks when dealing with patients suspected of having swine flu. The CDC also advised sick workers to stay home.
To date, about 80 health care workers have been confirmed with swine flu. The study examined the 26 cases of infected workers with detailed information as of mid-May
The study's numbers are too small to generalize about what's going on in clinics and hospitals. But they suggest that at least some health care workers aren't doing enough to identify and isolate patients with swine flu and take precautions when treating them, said Dr. Michael Bell, a CDC official focused on infection control in health care settings.
"I think we've been lucky that this first wave has not been of the lethality that some people feared," Bell said, at a news conference Thursday.
But CDC officials say many health care workers will need to improve how they deal with the flu, especially if - as some fear - the virus mutates into a deadlier form.
The study is being published this week in a CDC publication, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
The 80 cases of health care workers is out of the nearly 18,000 confirmed and probable U.S. cases reported as of last Friday. Those numbers suggest health care workers are underrepresented in the case counts, CDC officials said.
About 1,600 people have been hospitalized inthe U.S. and at least 44 died, according to CDC numbers. Many of the victims were younger adults, children and people with other illnesses. About 40 percent of those hospitalized have been people with asthma, diabetes, heart disease and other medical conditions, said Dr. Daniel Jernigan, a CDC flu expert.
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- Support single payer health care. It cost HALF what our current disastrous system costs, and provides BETTER healthcare, for EVERYBODY.
I'm posting here because CBS is afraid to post any story related to the most important issue of our day (other than the Wall Street craziness), which is the healthcare issue. - Reply to this comment
- Looks like you guys are going to have some serious problems if there ever is a serious outbreak.
And this could have become more serious because of their incompetence. - Reply to this comment
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