English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

RECENTLY I VISITED A LAB TO GET MY MALARIAL TEST DONE, BUT I NOTICED THAT THE LAB TECHNICIAN HAD FRESH BLOOD STAINS ON HIS GLOVES WHEN HE INSERTED A NEW BUTTERFLY NEEDLE INTO MY VEIN. HE HAD OPENED THE NEW NEEDLE AND UNWINDED THE PLASTIC TUBE WITH THOSE BLOOD STAINED GLOVES. ALSO THE TIP OF THE NEEDLE HAD TOUCHED THE PLASTIC TUBE BEFORE HE INSERTED THE SAME INTO MY VEIN..I AM VERY MUCH CONCERNED AND SCARED THAT IF THOSE BLOOD STAINS ON HIS GLOVES CARRIED HIV GERMS THEN CAN I ACQUIRE HIV GERMS THRU THIS MODE. PLEASE LET ME KNOW THAT WHAT SHOULD I DO? IS THERE A NEED TO GET MYSELF TESTED. WHICH TEST DO I HAVE TO GO FOR? I SINCERELY NEED HELP AND AM SCARED TO DEATH.

2006-11-18 23:50:24 · 8 answers · asked by harshaddsh 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions Infectious Diseases

8 answers

Based on my knowledge on this issue, if blood is exposed out in the open (air), the virus inside can only survive for a few seconds. Therefore it won't be harmful.

Reading from your statement you mentioned it was a fresh stain. I will imply it as dry.

If you are still worried you can always go for a HIV testing. There's only one test to see whether you're HIV positive or not. Most government hospitals give free testing and the result is strictly private and confidential.

Do inform the doctor of how this matter came to be. There is a 'window period' which means that you might/might not carry the HIV virus. This 'window period' means you have to go for regular testing because they can't detect the virus for a certain period of time.

Hope this helps.

2006-11-19 00:08:08 · answer #1 · answered by inx 2 · 0 0

Studies have proven time and time again that HIV does not survive well outside the body. In artificially high concentrations produced in the lab, HIV drying that occurs outside of the body reduces the number of infectious viral particles by 99 percent in just a few hours. Since the concentration of HIV in blood or other bodily fluids is much lower, HIV drying outside the body virtually eliminates all infectious HIV particles therefore making the risk of HIV infection from blood or bodily fluids outside the body essentially zero.

Keep in mind that while HIV infection from infectious bodily fluids outside the body is essentially zero, other diseases like hepatitis B and C can and do occur. Therefore, any blood or bodily fluid outside the body should be considered a health risk and cleaned up using universal precautions and cleaning fluids that are known to kill viruses on contact.

That's My Best Answer!

2006-11-19 01:15:29 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Calm down, the odds are remote, but the worker should be fired and get a test because otherwise you'll worry.

Side note: The information that people are saying below about it surviving for a matter of "seconds" is not true, as it's been shown to survive for up to a week in a dry environment and up to 2 weeks in moisture. There is a lot of politically correct misinformation, because it's the world's first poliitically protected disease.

2006-11-18 23:53:49 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, you would be able to now now not unfold HIV that way. The virus it particularly is in cost is amazingly fragile, and it won't stay to inform the tale out of the physique for somewhat long in any admire. it particularly isn't purely the air that does it, it particularly is all different matters- loss of moisture, distinctive chemicals, and so forth that ought to do the pastime of killing it. you will in all probability want to grab yet another nasty matters, yet HIV would not be on the record, luckily. There are all styles of little horror techniques on the cyber internet with this way of subject be counted- each ingredient from shrink pineapple bits to chicken satays that have been supposedly contaminated via an HIV effective guy or lady reducing themselves, bleeding on the foodstuff/plates/utensils - and then giving it to an unsuspecting guy or lady. purely placed, the situation purely isn't possible or conceivable. HIV is unfold via quite intimate touch between human beings, via contaminated blood transfusions, and shared needles. it particularly is now now not unfold via the style you describe, by no capacity.

2016-12-17 12:32:14 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Keep in mind that HIV is a virus that doesnt survive well on it's own, and needs specific conditions to survive and multiply. I'd say it survives about 15 to 25 seconds if not in apropriate conditions before dying, so unless he rushed through his examinations and poked you strait away, then you dont need to worry.

I would suggest a check though, just to be sure. What test, im afraid i dont know, call the hospital for info...

2006-11-19 00:02:02 · answer #5 · answered by Seb 2 · 0 0

Well...first of all, call your physician and have this discussion with him/her. Second, contact the hospital and ask to speak to someone in Patient Relations and let them know what occured and that you are following up with your physician. Lastly, never allow anyone to take blood from you or examine you in anyway without first changing their gloves. You must take responsibility for your own safety in all situations...you should have said, excuse me but there is blood on your gloves, please change them before touching me...if the technician refused, I would immediately ask to speak with someone in charge and refuse to all the test to be done until the situation were addressed. You are probably fine....but go to your doctor to make sure. Good luck.

2006-11-18 23:56:46 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Indeed there is a possiblility that you can contract AIDS this way. You should have pointed out the lab tech's carelessness when you spotted it, and saved yourself some grief.

2006-11-19 00:05:45 · answer #7 · answered by WC 7 · 0 0

it was your job to stop him in the first place.

2006-11-18 23:58:12 · answer #8 · answered by DASH 5 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers