Unvaccinated healthcare workers responsible for spread of Hepatitis B: DAK

Excelsior Correspondent
SRINAGAR, Dec 2: Raising concern over growing number of Hepatitis B positive cases in Valley, Doctors Association Kashmir (DAK) today said the unvaccinated healthcare workers are responsible for spread of Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in Kashmir.
Terming the rise in Hepatitis B virus cases alarming, the DAK president Dr Nisar-ul-Hassan said the unvaccinated healthcare workers (HCWs) are a constant source of infection and risk lives of patients. “The unprotected medical personnel are vulnerable to HBV infection which they can pass to hundreds of patients they come into contact with each day and can lead to institutional and community outbreaks,” he said.
“Medical staff has no right to harm a patient and it is unethical to leave HCWs unimmunized as it endangers public health. Majority of our doctors, nurses and paramedics are not vaccinated against HBV as they have not been offered,” the DAK president said.
He said some of them have been partially immunized and quite a few have received all three doses of vaccine but have not checked their antibody titer to confer 100% protection. “Although HBV vaccine is currently administered to all children and infants as part of universal immunization programme but majority of adults’ especially high risk are unprotected and should be vaccinated,” Hassan said.
The DAK president said the vaccination schedule for adults is zero, one and six months and booster dose is to be given to patients undergoing hemodialysis in whom antibody titers are less than 10 mIU/ml. “HBV infection is an established cause of cirrhosis, liver failure and even death. Blood banks, unsafe therapeutic injections and unhygienic dental clinics continue to be important modes of transmission,” he said.