Published Aug 20, 2013
nervousnurse, ASN
291 Posts
Curious....have you heard this before? And, the employee health nurse also told me that like MANY Americans, many nurses and/or other health care employees have NO idea they have Hep C ....how scary!!?? She also added that many do not know HOW they got it? (meaning, if not from a needle-stick or other workplace accident involving blood, they have NONE of the typical history of Hep C patients, and don't know how they got it)
I'm also VERY curious how your facility handles PATIENTS with Hep C. At two diffeent places I've worked, many people freak OUT when we've had patients with Hep C.....one place had Isolation carts, and the other place place didn't.....what is the policy with Hep C + patients where YOU work?
Twinmom06, ASN, APN
1,171 Posts
universal precautions - same in both hospitals I worked at and both I did clinical at
MunoRN, RN
8,058 Posts
It is surprisingly common. About 3.2 million Americans have hep C, or about 1 out every 100.
Altra, BSN, RN
6,255 Posts
As a healthcare professional, the appropriate response is not to "freak out" or be "scared", but to educate yourself. Good info available from reliable, easily accessible sources such as the CDC, and your hospital's infection control nurses.
pockunit, ADN, RN
614 Posts
I only know I don't have it because I got stuck and had to have bloodwork done. Whee?
Altra's right, though, universal precautions and education are key.
iluvivt, BSN, RN
2,774 Posts
It is called "standard precautions". The CDC changed the name quite awhile ago and added to the recommendations.
I agree about people NOT needing to "freak out"....I have reminded countless coworkers that
ANYONE can have AIDS, Hep C, etc....that's why we use Standard Precautions. It always
amazes me how much a patient with Hepatitis C makes everyone so uncomfortable. And,
the fact that one place I worked had to haul out the big yellow cart and the other didn't
makes no sense!
hiddencatRN, BSN, RN
3,408 Posts
That's weird. I've seen providers appear a bit more nervous with a patient with HIV but not Hep C.
TheCommuter, BSN, RN
102 Articles; 27,612 Posts
I wrote about hepatitis C over a year ago: https://allnurses.com/infectious-disease-nursing/hepatitis-c-more-742594.html
170 million people worldwide are infected with HCV. 4 million of these people live in the US. The majority are unaware that they carry the virus because many years elapse before symptoms arise. HCV carriers outnumber HIV carriers many times over.
I wouldn't be too surprised if I was a carrier of hepatitis C since I shared living quarters with my infected parents for many years. They're both diabetics and occasionally used their lancets to stick my fingers.
My mother had end stage liver disease secondary to HCV+ infection and required a liver transplantation in 2002. She contracted HCV from a tainted blood transfusion in the early 1980s. She did not display any signs or symptoms until the late 1990s.
HCV is a smaller and hardier virus than HIV and survives on surfaces a lot longer.
RNsRWe, ASN, RN
3 Articles; 10,428 Posts
Isolation?? carts?? Serious overkill.
As has been said, standard precautions only. So you know that Patient Bob has Hep C, ok....how about Patient Sam and Patient Dan that also have it, but you don't know? Gloves, people.
We oftentimes have such patients, and I work endoscopy. People come in with HIV, pick-a-Hep, you name it. MRSA is everywhere; we certainly don't test for it before a colonoscopy. We occasionally are sending a sample for c.diff; people carry that too. I just assume everyone has something I don't want to catch!
Just today a patient tried to hand me a phlemmy, sticky Kleenex wad. I didn't have gloves on, and said "hold on a minute" while I grabbed for the box. Patient was indignant, saying "I don't have cooties". Really? Would that be clinically-defined cooties you do (or don't) have? Sigh.
RNewbie
412 Posts
It amazes me how healthcare professions freak out with hep c, HIV, ect pts. Think about how many ppl you care for everyday who are carriers of these viruses and have not been tested.
Commuter....I will read your article, thank you.
RNsRWe....yes, the big YELLOW carts, signs, everyone MUST gown and glove---seriously!?? (to clarify....this doesn't happen where I work now!) Sheesh, I'd always think to myself "I'm going in there to do an assessment ---I'm not going to exchange BLOOD with these HepC patients!!!!" ...and I also refused to wear a gown when ALL I was going to do was a head-to-toe assessment!