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At the end of February, eight people who underwent
procedures at the Endoscopy Center of Southern Nevada in Las Vegas were diagnosed with hepatitis C. Therefore,
Southern Nevada Health District officials revoked the clinic business license
and, as a precaution, recommended nearly 40,000 people who received anesthesia
at the clinic between March 2004 and January 11 of this year be tested for all
trains of hepatitis as well as HIV.
Hepatitis C is a chronic, potentially fatal virus that can
cause liver ailments, including cancer and lifer failure. The concern is higher
than usual, as many patients who contract the blood-borne hepatitis C are asymptomatic
for many years. Early symptoms include jaundice, nausea, and fatigue. The
disease is most often transmitted by sharing unclean needles and syringes.
Things seem to worsen for the clinic as Nevada health officials reported Thursday 77
new cases of hepatitis C among patients treated at the clinic. The infections
were caused by the reuse of anesthesia syringes among multiple patients. Records
show the patients were in good health before seeking treatment at the Nevada clinic.
“We know they didn’t have a positive test before they went
to the clinic, and now they’re positive,” Brian Labus, senior epidemiologist
with the Southern Nevada Health District, said, as quoted by Fox News.
Most shocking is the fact that the clinic has not received
any inspection since 2001 and, according to state policies, ambulatory medical
centers must be officially examined every three years.
The outbreak has drawn the attention of federal health
officials and law enforcement authorities, including the Nevada attorney general and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
A similar outbreak of hepatitis C occurred in 2002 at a Nebraska cancer clinic,
when 99 patients were infected because a nurse used the same syringe on more
than one patient. The number of hepatitis C cases at the Nevada clinic could be higher than 99, as
health officials are still learning about patients who underwent treatment there
and got infected with the virus.
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