Something similar happened in Canada a few decades ago. I came across a survivor of that episode a few years ago. He was still mad about it (understandably).
I’d be upset too, but Hep B/C and HIV are survivable these days. It would really suck to know that you were exposed to CJD though. There’s no surviving that one.
Survivable does not mean you are going to have a good time. With HIV you are on strong antivirals for the rest of your life. Anything is better than slowly dying but its not a walk in the park.
I was a patient that was possibly exposed to HIV due to poor sanitary procedures on equipment used for endoscopies and sigmoidoscopies by the VA in ~2004. Luckily, I didn’t get infected. Also, by the time the VA caught on and notified me of the possible exposure/infection years later, I was already confident I didn’t have HIV since I was getting regular tests anyway.
Still, it’s scary to think that you could get infected by just going to a medical procedure. There’s really nothing you can do to prevent that since all you can do is trust the system. Also, I believe that the VA informed me because they were a federal agency. Had it been a private provider, they could’ve covered it up to protect themselves. Makes me wonder if people have been infected by medical providers only to think it was because of something else.
Oof. That’s a bad fuck up.
Something similar happened in Canada a few decades ago. I came across a survivor of that episode a few years ago. He was still mad about it (understandably).
I’d be upset too, but Hep B/C and HIV are survivable these days. It would really suck to know that you were exposed to CJD though. There’s no surviving that one.
Survivable does not mean you are going to have a good time. With HIV you are on strong antivirals for the rest of your life. Anything is better than slowly dying but its not a walk in the park.
I was a patient that was possibly exposed to HIV due to poor sanitary procedures on equipment used for endoscopies and sigmoidoscopies by the VA in ~2004. Luckily, I didn’t get infected. Also, by the time the VA caught on and notified me of the possible exposure/infection years later, I was already confident I didn’t have HIV since I was getting regular tests anyway.
Still, it’s scary to think that you could get infected by just going to a medical procedure. There’s really nothing you can do to prevent that since all you can do is trust the system. Also, I believe that the VA informed me because they were a federal agency. Had it been a private provider, they could’ve covered it up to protect themselves. Makes me wonder if people have been infected by medical providers only to think it was because of something else.