14 Kids Infected With HIV, Hepatitis After Blood Transfusion in UP’s Hospital

MADRID, SPAIN – AUGUST 23: The Minister of Health of the Community of Madrid, Enrique Ruiz Escudero, donates blood at the Transfusion Centre of the Community of Madrid, on 23 August, 2021 in Madrid, Spain. The Ministry of Health is launching a campaign to raise public awareness of the need to recover blood reserves, which are still 20% below their optimum level. With the slogan ‘We need holidays. We need donations’ reminds that in addition to the 1,000 extra bags that are missing in the reserves, 15,000 blood donations are required during the month of August. (Photo By Marta Fernandez Jara/Europa Press via Getty Images)

Fourteen children undergoing blood transfusions have tested positive for infections like Hepatitis B, C and HIV, doctors at a hospital in Uttar Pradesh’s Kanpur said on Monday, acknowledging that the minors now face a greater risk in addition to the Thalassemia condition that necessitated the transfusions in the first place.

The incident was reported at the government-run Lala Lajpat Rai (LLR) Hospital, where officials indicated the fault could lie with ineffective tests for viruses that are meant to be procedurally carried out on donated blood, although the source of the infection itself may be hard to pinpoint.

Dr Arun Arya, head of paediatrics department at LLR and nodal officer for this centre, said this is a cause for concern and shows the risks blood transfusion involves. “We have referred the hepatitis patients to the gastroenterology department and the HIV patients to the referral centre in Kanpur,” he said, adding that the HIV infections were particularly worrying.

At present, 180 thalassemia patients receive blood transfusion at the centre, which screens each of them every six months for any viral diseases. The 14 children had received blood transfusions at private and district hospitals, and in some cases locally, when they required it urgently.

Arya said the blood transfusion took place during the window period. “This seems to be the case… the children are already battling a serious issue and are now at a greater health risk,” he said.

According to him, when someone donates blood, the blood is tested to make sure it is safe for use. However, there is a period of time after someone was infected when the virus could not be detected by the tests — this is called the “window period”.

“At the time of transfusion, the doctors should have [also] vaccinated the children against Hepatitis B,” he added.

The 14 children are aged between the ages of 6 and 16, are among the 180 patients.

Of the infected children, seven tested positive for Hepatitis B, five for Hepatitis C and two for HIV, said Arya.

The children come from different parts of the state, including Kanpur City, Dehat, Farrukhabad, Auraiya, Etawah and Kannauj.

“District-level officials will trace the root of infection under the Viral Hepatitis Control Programme. The team will look for the place of infection, both for hepatitis and HIV,” said a senior official of the Uttar Pradesh National Health Mission on condition of anonymity.

Source: Hindustan Times

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