In only three months, nearly 80 children under 15 including a 6.5-month-old boy from Khoai Chau Commune, Hung Yen Province were diagnosed with genital warts, a sexually transmitted infection.
A doctor treats a patient at the Thanh Nhan General Hospital in Hanoi.
Doctors warn that using the same unsterilised gloves or medical instruments on several patients may spread germs and diseases can spread in clinics and hospitals.
The more patients, the greater chance of infection
A 2014 measles outbreak in Hanoi killing 150 children was an example of infections in a hospital. On April 17, 2014, alone there were 33 child patients transferred from other departments for measles treatments to the HanoiNational Children Hospital, with six times that number infected.
Respiratory diseases such as measles, flu or tuberculosis spread the easiest. It is also possible for contagious diseases like hepatitis or HIV to spread via gloves used for different patients, according to Nguyen Trong Khoa, Deputy Head of Department of Medical Examination and Treatment Management under the Ministry of Health.
“The more patients, the greater chance to be infected. It is vital that doctors rinse their hands after having contact with patients”, he added.
One pair of gloves for several patients
“Wearing gloves means doctors are not afraid to touch wounds. Therefore, they may transfer germs or viruses to other patients if still using the same pair”, an expert from Bach Mai Hospital told Youth newspaper.
Recent surveys show that about 30 per cent of medical workers don’t clean their hands before treating patients, with doctors most likely to disobey sanitation regulations.
Duong Duc Hung, Head of Integrated Planning Department at Bạch Mai Hospital said public health facilities guarantee better sanitary procedures as most devices are anti-infection.
Single-use surgical gowns are used at the National Cardiovascular Institute under Bạch Mai Hospital since blood with HIV or hepatitis B on doctors’ gowns poses a threat of infection. The ‘one patient, one stethoscope’ practice is also applied.
Control recommendations
According to the Ministry of Health, being infected while in hospital adds up to 15 days to normal treatment and costs patients VNĐ3 million (US$150) more.
Doctor Vo Pham Trong Nhan, Deputy Head of Peripheral Nerve Surgery Department under Nguyen Dinh Chieu Hospital, expressed concerns about infections at hospitals, taking the case of genital warts in Hung Yen Province for example.
He implied that as well as public hospitals, hygiene in private clinics has to be improved, however hygiene controls are largely under the control of private hospitals themselves, perhaps warranting an investigation of private clinics.
VNS