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Australia Covid-19 quarantine blunder prompts calls for hundreds to take HIV test

Author
CNN,
Publish Date
Wed, 21 Oct 2020, 2:03PM
Stamford Plaza hotel in Australia. (Photo / Getty)
Stamford Plaza hotel in Australia. (Photo / Getty)

Australia Covid-19 quarantine blunder prompts calls for hundreds to take HIV test

Author
CNN,
Publish Date
Wed, 21 Oct 2020, 2:03PM

More than 200 former residents of coronavirus quarantine facilities in Australia are being urged to test for blood-transmitted diseases, including HIV, after authorities admitted they used the same blood-testing devices for multiple guests.

It's the latest in a series of Covid-19 setbacks to hit the country and the state of Victoria in particular. Earlier breaches at Victoria quarantine hotels led to a Covid-19 outbreak in Melbourne, prompting the country's second biggest city to spend months under a strict lockdown.

In a statement Monday, Victorian health agency, Safer Care Victoria, said it was contacting 243 people who had a blood glucose level test before August 20 as there was a risk of cross-contamination and blood-borne viruses, including HIV.

"The clinical risk of infection is low. However, for reassurance, access to confidential testing will be arranged," Safer Care Victoria said in a statement.

Victoria has reported more than 20,000 coronavirus cases, including over 800 deaths, making it the Covid-19 hotspot of Australia. The country has reported more than 27,400 cases and at least 905 deaths in total, according to Johns Hopkins University.

What went wrong with the tests

Australia closed its borders to all non-citizens and residents in March, and any returning travelers must pay 3,000 Australian dollars ($2,110) to spend two weeks in a state quarantine facility.

In the months since, thousands of travelers have passed through Australia's quarantine hotels -- but not all of them require a blood glucose level test.

These devices -- which take a finger prick to get a drop of blood -- are used to test blood glucose levels in people with diabetes, but may also be used for pregnant women, people who fainted, or people who are generally unwell.

Although the devices are designed for several uses by one person, they were used for multiple residents, Safer Care said. The needles can be changed between use, but the devices can retain microscopic amounts of blood.

According to Safer Care, there is no risk that the devices could have transmitted coronavirus as it's not spread by blood. But there is a "low clinical list" of the spread of Hepatitis B and C, and HIV.

"The clinical risk is low," said Safer Care deputy CEO Ann Maree Keenan. "Right now, we won't be able to answer the many questions people will have about how this happened. Be assured that Safer Care Victoria is conducting a full review into how and why this device came to be in use."

But experts told CNN affiliate 9News that the situation was concerning.

President of the Australian Medical Association, Dr. Omar Khorshid, told 9News that the incident was another blunder in the country's flawed hotel quarantine program. An inquiry into the state's quarantine scheme is still ongoing.

"It is yet more evidence of failure of that system," he said.

text by Julia Hollingsworth, CNN

 

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