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Porter Adventist offers blood disease testing for patients who underwent recent surgeries

CDPHE found additional patients may be at risk
Posted at 4:26 PM, Apr 06, 2018
and last updated 2018-04-06 20:44:23-04

DENVER – Porter Adventist Hospital is offering recent surgery patients a chance to be tested for blood diseases, just days after notifying the public of a beach in the sterilization process of medical instruments over the past two years.

On Friday, a spokesperson for the hospital said that in coordination with the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE), Adventist was offering the test to patients who underwent orthopedic or spine surgical procedures from February 21 to April 5 of this year.

"The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment’s continued investigation into the infection control breach at Porter Adventist Hospital has determined that additional patients who had orthopedic or spine surgery at Porter may be at risk for surgical site infections and/or HIV, hepatitis C and hepatitis B," said Dr. Larry Wolk, the CDPHE executive director and chief medical officer, said in a statement.

Hospital officials said they would notify patients directly through a written letter and would be providing additional information regarding surgical site infection.

The latest announcement comes a day after hospital officials said they were voluntarily canceling most surgeries Thursday and Friday after noticing “a potential change in our water quality relative to our surgical equipment,” according to a statement from Porter Adventist Hospital spokeswoman Chrissy Nicholson.

The revelation prompted CDPHE officials to conduct an additional on-site survey Thursday afternoon, noting that while they had "not identified any infections caused as a result of this breach," they were still investigating "whether additional patients may be at risk,” Wolk said. 

“The risk of harm from this incident continues to be unknown, but it is thought to be low," he said. 

Because the investigation is ongoing, he said, the hospital voluntarily canceled most surgeries scheduled for Thursday and Friday.

On Wednesday, hospital officials said they were notifying people who had orthopedic or spinal surgeries between July 21, 2016 and Feb. 20 of this year about the breach, which the hospital said could have put some patients at risk of hepatitis B or C, or HIV.

“The process for cleaning surgical instruments following orthopedic and spine surgeries was found to be inadequate, which may have compromised the sterilization of the instruments,” Wolk said in a statement Wednesday.

He said the hospital notified the CDPHE of the breach on Feb. 21, and that the department did an inspection of the hospital’s infection control practices the next day.

The hospital stopped using its equipment and reprocessed it on Feb. 20, the CDPHE noted. 

Wolk said the hospital mailed letters to patients who had surgery during the affected timeframe on Wednesday, adding the hospital had established a hotline for patient questions. The phone number to call is (303) 778-5694.