Hospital transplants 5 HIV-infected organs

Proletariat.

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Annie Huang, The Associated Press

TAIPEI, Taiwan - One of Taiwan's

best regarded hospitals transplanted organs from an HIV carrier into five

patients, a hospital official said Monday, in what appears to be one of the most

egregious examples of medical negligence in the island's modern

history.

The five are now being treated with anti-AIDS drugs, said the official at

National Taiwan University Hospital in Taipei.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because she is not authorized to

deal with the media.

In a posting on its website over the weekend, the hospital said the mistake

occurred because a transplant staffer believed he heard the English word

"non-reactive" on the donor's standard HIV test, which means negative, while the

word "reactive" was actually given.

The hospital added that the information on the test result was given over the

telephone and was not double-checked, as required by standard operating

procedures.

"We deeply apologize for the mistake," the hospital said.

Shih Chung-liang, a Health Department official, said a department team will

look into the mistaken transplants and decide on possible penalties for NTUH. If

negligence was found to have caused the blunder, Shih said the hospital may have

to suspend its transplant programs for up to a year in addition to unspecified

fines.

The donor was a 37-year-old man who fell into a coma on Aug. 24 and his

heart, liver, lungs and two kidneys were transplanted to five patients on the

same day. The heart transplant was conducted at another hospital, while the four

other transplants were conducted at NTUH, according to NTUH.

The donor's mother, who was not identified, told cable news stations that she

felt terrible about the transplants and had not been aware of her son's ailment.

She said he died after "falling from a high spot," without providing

details.

Yao Ke-wu, who heads the health department of Hsinchu city, where the donor

resided, decried the NTUH transplants as "appalling negligence."

He said NTUH staffers could have avoided the mistake by asking his department

about the donor's medical history in advance, and deplored that such inquiries

were not mandatory in Taiwan.

Yao said the five organ receivers will very likely contract HIV, and their

anti-AIDS treatment will be further complicated because they also have to take

medication to modify rejection of the new organs.

The five recipients are all Taiwanese. NTUH is among about a dozen

well-equipped and highly-respected Taiwanese hospitals offering organ

transplants.

There are also concerns among the physicians and nurses who conducted the

transplants that they too may contract HIV. Medical staffers routinely take

protections against bodily fluids during surgeries, but some experts also warned

needle and other accidential cuts could still expose them to HIV.

Lee Nan-yao, a physician with the National Chengkung University Hospital,

which performed the heart transplant, told the United Daily News that some

physicians and nurses who had conducted the transplant "were depressed, and on

the verge of panic."

 
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No one is still a bitch about stem cells. Unless of course you are extremely uneducated on the subject and think the only way to receive them is from the umbilical cord.
 
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