Tuesday, July 20, 2010

EMT Who Refused to Help Dying Pregnant Woman Gets Shot in Face, Killed

Medic Who Stood by While Pregnant Woman Died in Bakery Shot Outside NYC Nightclub, but Police Say Events Are Unrelated

(AP) Authorities say an emergency medical technician accused of refusing to help a dying pregnant woman during his coffee break was fatally shot near a New York City nightclub.

Police believe those accusations and the shooting were unrelated.

Police say Jason Green was shot in the face near the Greenhouse club Sunday morning. There have been no arrests.

Green and fellow EMT Melisa Jackson had been under criminal investigation for their handling of a distressed woman at a Brooklyn bakery Dec. 9. They were in line at the bakery when 25-year-old Eutisha Rennix collapsed.

Witnesses say the EMTs told workers to call 911 and left without helping the woman, whose prematurely born baby also died.

The EMTs denied wrongdoing.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Physician Negligence

HEPATITIS B AND C, PHYSICIAN-RELATED CLUSTER - UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
***********************************************************************
A ProMED-mail post

ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases


Date: Fri 9 Jul 2010
Source: ModernMedicine, HealthDaily News [edited]
>


Improper Anesthesia Practice Causes Hepatitis Outbreak
------------------------------------------------------
An anesthesiologist who reused a contaminated single-use propofol
vial on multiple endoscopy patients caused an outbreak of hepatitis
infection affecting 13 patients at 2 clinics, according to a report
published in the July 2010 issue of Gastroenterology. [Propofol is a
drug used to induce or maintain anesthesia during certain surgeries,
tests, or procedures. - Mod.CP]

Bruce Gutelius, M.D., of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, and colleagues [reference below]
investigated outbreaks of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C
virus (HCV) infections among patients at the 2 clinics who had
received anesthesia from the same anesthesiologist. The investigators
reviewed medical charts, conducted patient interviews and site
visits, and performed infection control assessments. The
investigators also did molecular sequencing of available patient isolates.

At one clinic, the researchers identified 6 cases of HCV infection
and 6 cases of HBV infection, and at the other clinic, one case of
HCV infection; all the cases were associated with the outbreak. HCV
quasispecies sequences from the patients were found to be nearly
identical (96.9 to 100 percent) to those from the patients considered
to be the infection source. The investigators write that the
anesthesiologist used a single-use vial of propofol on multiple
patients, and conclude that the likely cause of the viral
transmission was the reuse of syringes to re-dose patients, which
contaminated the vials for later patients.

"Gastroenterologists are urged to review carefully the injection,
medication handling, and other infection control practices of all
staff under their supervision, including providers of anesthesia
services," the authors write.

--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mil


[Nosocomial transmission of hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus
infections have occurred frequently in the United States and
elsewhere as a result of medical negligence, most frequently in
association with haemodialysis. The incident described above involves
anesthesia and multiple use of a single-use vial during endoscopy. It
is presumed to refer to events 1st described in the ProMED-mail post
titled: "Hepatitis C, physician-associated cluster - USA (NY)
20070616.1965," and subsequently.

The reference for the Gastroenterology paper on which the above
report is based is the following: "Multiple Clusters of Hepatitis
Virus Infections Associated With Anesthesia for Outpatient Endoscopy
Procedures. B. Gutelius and others, Gastroenterology Volume 139,
Issue 1, Pages 163-170, July 2010
"
(registration, purchase required). - Mod.CP]

[see also:
Hepatitis C, physician-related cluster - Australia (04): New
Zealand 20100603.1840
Hepatitis C, physician-related cluster - Australia (03): (VI) 20100531.1807
Hepatitis C, nosocomial - China (02): (IMAR) 20100519.1657
Hepatitis C, physician-related cluster - Australia (02): (VI) 20100420.1278
Hepatitis C, physician-related cluster - Australia: (VI) 20100408.1134
Hepatitis C, dialysis-related - Spain: (TG), RFI 20100209.0447
Hepatitis C, nosocomial - China (AH), RFI 20100107.0070
2009
----
Hepatitis C, transfusion related - Kazakhstan: (AA) 20091214.4243
Hepatitis C, nurse-associated - USA (02): (CO) clarification 20090708.2453
Hepatitis C, nurse-associated - USA: (CO) 20090707.2441
2008
----
Hepatitis C, dialysis-related - USA: (NY) 20080917.2917
Hepatitis C, American Indians - USA: (MT) 20080325.1115
2007
----
Hepatitis C, fibrinogen-transmitted - Japan: RFI 20071217.4063
Hepatitis C, physician-associated cluster - USA (NY) (04) 20071211.3988
Hepatitis C, hemodialysis unit - Spain (Barcelona) 20071209.3969
Hepatitis C, physician-associated cluster - USA (NY) (03) 20071207.3951
Hepatitis C, physician-associated cluster - USA (NY) (02) 20070628.2080
Hepatitis C, physician-associated cluster - USA (NY) 20070616.1965]
...................sb/cp/ejp/dk

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