They went to the dentist to get a wisdom tooth pulled or perhaps have
their jaw realigned. But they may have also contracted a blood-borne
virus.
Health officials in
Oklahoma are notifying 57 patients who tested positive for hepatitis C
and three patients who tested positive for hepatitis B after visiting
oral surgeon W. Scott Harrington's office in Tulsa and a city suburb,
according to a joint statement issued Wednesday by the Oklahoma State
Department of Health and the Tulsa Health Department.
At least one positive HIV
result was also reported, but policy prohibits the Oklahoma State
Department of Health from releasing the number if it's less than three.
Health officials stress that it's not yet clear how many of the positive patients were exposed at Harrington's office, if any.
This is a complex
investigation," state epidemiologist Kristy Bradley said in the
statement. "The next phase will include more in-depth interviews of
persons who test positive to determine the likelihood that their
exposure is associated with their dental surgical procedure at the
Harrington practice. We will certainly continue to keep the public
informed as we learn more."
More than 3,200 of
Harrington's patients were screened for HIV, hepatitis B and hepatitis C
after health investigators found sterilization violations and other
infractions at the oral surgeon's office.
"I will tell you that
when ... we left, we were just physically kind of sick," Susan Rogers,
executive director of the Oklahoma Board of Dentistry, told CNN earlier.
"That's how bad it was, and I've seen a lot of bad stuff over the
years."
The dentistry board
launched its probe after one of Harrington's patients came down with
hepatitis C. That patient originally tested positive for HIV, too, but a
subsequent test came back negative, the Tulsa Health Department said.
Investigators raised a
number of sterilization and "cross-contamination" alarms -- such as
"unauthorized, unlicensed" employees using IVs to sedate patients and
improper handling of needles.
The outward cleanliness
of the office belied the mess elsewhere, Rogers said, noting that "just
basic universal precautions for blood-borne pathogens" weren't followed.
Besides being "unlocked
and unattended," the drug cabinet was rife with issues -- containing,
for example, a drug that expired in 1993, according to the official
complaint filed before the state dental board. Other records showed that
morphine had been used in patients throughout 2012, even though the
dentist had not received a morphine delivery since 2009.
Harrington voluntarily
surrendered his dental license on March 20. He will appear at a
revocation hearing before the Oklahoma Board of Dentistry on August 16.
His attorney could not be immediately reached for comment.
Not all patients who may
have contracted a virus have been identified, state health officials
said, noting this is the first round of testing results. And the tests
used to diagnosis hepatitis and HIV are based on the body's immune
system response to infection, so some results could have come back
negative prematurely.
"Persons who are tested
prior to six months after exposure and are found to be negative should
be tested again at six months after exposure to assure they are
negative," the statement advised.
Hepatitis C is a contagious liver disease that can lead to liver failure and death, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Approximately 70% to 80% of people living with the virus do not have
any symptoms. Hepatitis B is a similar liver disease that can range from
a mild illness to a serious, chronic condition.
Anyone who was treated
at Harrington's dental practice should contact Oklahoma's patient
information hotline between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. at (918) 595-4500 with
questions.
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