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Koop Urges That All Surgical Patients Take AIDS Test

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Times Staff Writer

Surgeon General C. Everett Koop urged Thursday that all patients admitted to hospitals for surgery be tested for exposure to the AIDS virus, saying that operating room personnel are leaving their professions “because of the fear.”

“I think the day is not far off when the testing of surgical patients will become much more routine,” he said in testimony before Congress. “There will be a growing demand for the testing of surgical patients.”

Needle-Stick Injuries

Physicians and nurses in operating rooms are subject to potential needle-stick injuries and exposure to large amounts of blood, situations in which the virus could be “readily transmissible,” he said.

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Koop, addressing members of the House Select Committee on Children, Youth and Families on the subject of AIDS and teen-agers, made his remarks in response to a question about the right of health care workers to know whether patients are infected with the virus. He did not elaborate.

Koop did not address the issue of confidentiality of test results and how such information would be kept private within the hospital.

Hippocratic Oath Cited

The surgeon general stressed later through a spokesman that test results should not be used by surgeons as a reason to refuse to operate on infected patients.

“Under the Hippocratic Oath, doctors should take care of their patients,” Koop said through Public Health Service spokesman James Brown, who added that Koop--a former pediatric surgeon--had made the recommendation “not as surgeon general, but as a surgeon.”

Federal health officials have not yet formally recommended that surgical patients undergo the procedure, but Brown said that “we are looking at it.”

“We’ve been getting a lot of reports of nurses and others leaving the field because they don’t want to operate in this area,” Brown said. “There are things that occur in the operating room that people have to take precautions against. You should be following precautions anyway, but, if you know somebody has the virus, you should be extra careful.”

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A spokeswoman for the American College of Surgeons said that the organization’s governing board is deliberating a policy recommendation regarding the testing of patients for AIDS infection, expected sometime this summer. She said college officials would have no comment on Koop’s suggestion until then.

“From what I’ve seen come across my desk so far, everyone is divided,” she said. “There is no consensus.”

The Public Health Service earlier this year considered recommending that all hospital patients be routinely screened for AIDS infection but rejected the suggestion because, among other reasons, many hospital patients, such as the elderly and children, are not among those at highest risk for the illness.

Gloves Recommended

Federal health officials already have recommended that all health care workers take precautions, such as wearing gloves, when treating AIDS patients and have emphasized that medical personnel should routinely take special care when handling the blood and body fluids of all patients, whether or not they are known to be infected.

Last month, federal officials reported three cases in which health care workers--who were not wearing gloves--became infected after a single but extensive accidental exposure to the blood of AIDS patients.

Meanwhile, under a new program announced Thursday at Cook County Hospital in Chicago, physicians, nurses and other health care workers will be required to wear rubber gloves, masks, goggles and gowns whenever they come in contact with the body fluids of any patient, not just patients with AIDS.

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Used by Few Hospitals

“As far as I know, there are only about three other hospitals in the country using this program,” a hospital spokesman said. “It’s not a widespread practice yet, but I expect it will be.”

AIDS, or acquired immune deficiency syndrome, destroys the body’s immune system, leaving it powerless against certain cancers and otherwise rare infections. The virus can also invade the central nervous system, causing severe neurological disorders. It is commonly transmitted through sexual intercourse, through the sharing of unsterilized hypodermic needles and by woman to fetus during pregnancy.

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