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Gov't:
Red Cross Did Not Probe Infections
U.S.
News
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January 2, 2003
December 30, 2002 10:04 PM EST
WASHINGTON
- The American Red Cross received reports that 134
people, including one who died, got hepatitis B
after blood transfusions, but the organization did
not investigate them because of internal policies
that violate government safety rules, federal
regulators say.
In
one case, an Ohio Red Cross chapter challenged the
policies and eventually uncovered two additional
patients who got the dangerous liver infection
after transfusions that came from the same blood
donor. The evidence got that donor kicked off the
blood donor list, government records show.
They
are the latest in a series of revelations about
safety violations that have plagued the Red Cross
for more than 10 years.
The
Food and Drug Administration, which uncovered the
hepatitis infections in a recent inspection of Red
Cross headquarters, is pushing the organization to
find out if bad blood really caused the rest of
the infections.
"We
will insist that they follow up," FDA
spokesman Brad Stone said Monday.
But
the hepatitis examples show that "the blood
supply is much less safe than the Red Cross, and
even to some extent the FDA, has led people to
believe," said Dr. Sidney Wolfe of the
consumer advocacy group Public Citizen, which is
urging a congressional investigation of Red Cross
problems.
While
previous FDA inspections have uncovered procedural
errors that could have harmed patients, this one
may have uncovered a death, said Wolfe, who
alerted lawmakers to the documents on Monday.
The
Red Cross declined comment on the hepatitis cases
Monday. But the charity, which provides 45 percent
of the nation's blood supply, reiterated a
statement it recently released saying it is
working hard to improve overall safety.
"The
Red Cross understands more work needs to be done
to further strengthen our processes and
procedures, and we are fully committed to working
collaboratively with the FDA to enhance our
systems," that statement said.
The
FDA cited the hepatitis discovery as one of more
than 200 violations of federal safety rules it
found during its latest inspection of Red Cross
headquarters.
The
FDA also alleges that some Red Cross employees
were instructed to skip required safety steps, and
others altered records to allow release of blood
that had failed safety testing. In addition, the
FDA charged the Red Cross failed to screen out
some people who weren't supposed to give blood,
and couldn't account for what happened to the
resulting donations.
In
the case of the hepatitis reports, the FDA said
the failure to investigate the 134 cases resulted
from Red Cross policies that limit the number of
possible blood-related infections the charity
investigates. It said those policies violated
federal safety standards that the charity agreed
to follow as part of an ongoing legal battle with
the government.
Specifically,
the policies called for investigating only if the
donor was known to have had an abnormal hepatitis
test or didn't qualify to give blood, and forbade
investigation if the patient received transfusions
from more than 10 donors, FDA documents say.
In
January 2001, a northern Ohio Red Cross chapter
got special permission to investigate one
hepatitis infection linked to multiple
transfusions, and discovered that one of the
donors involved had been linked to an earlier,
unproven hepatitis infection, the FDA inspectors
found. After that discovery, the Red Cross barred
the donor from giving again.
The
FDA called such policies a violation of a 1993
court order demanding that the Red Cross improve
its safety procedures to comply with federal
standards.
Last
year, the FDA went back to court seeking contempt
charges against the Red Cross for repeated safety
violations since 1993. The FDA and Red Cross have
been in negotiations for several months to settle
those charges.
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