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Recommendations for postexposure interventions to prevent infection with hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus, or human immunodeficiency virus, and tetanus in persons wounded during bombings and other mass-casualty events--United States, 2008: recommendat

TitleRecommendations for postexposure interventions to prevent infection with hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus, or human immunodeficiency virus, and tetanus in persons wounded during bombings and other mass-casualty events--United States, 2008: recommendat
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsChapman, LE, Sullivent, EE, Grohskopf, LA, Beltrami, EM, Perz, JF, Kretsinger, K, Panlilio, AL, Thompson, ND, Ehrenberg, RL, Gensheimer, KF, Duchin, JS, Kilmarx, PH, Hunt, RC
Corporate AuthorsCenters for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
JournalMMWR Recomm Rep
Volume57
IssueRR-6
Pagination1-21; quiz CE1-4
Date Published2008 Aug 1
ISSN1545-8601
KeywordsBlood-Borne Pathogens, Counseling, Disaster Medicine, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis B Vaccines, Hepatitis C, HIV Infections, Humans, Mass Casualty Incidents, Risk Assessment, Serologic Tests, Tetanus, Tetanus Toxoid
Abstract

This report outlines recommendations for postexposure interventions to prevent infection with hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus, or human immunodeficiency virus, and tetanus in persons wounded during bombings or other events resulting in mass casualties. Persons wounded during such events or in conjunction with the resulting emergency response might be exposed to blood, body fluids, or tissue from other injured persons and thus be at risk for bloodborne infections. This report adapts existing general recommendations on the use of immunization and postexposure prophylaxis for tetanus and for occupational and nonoccupational exposures to bloodborne pathogens to the specific situation of a mass-casualty event. Decisions regarding the implementation of prophylaxis are complex, and drawing parallels from existing guidelines is difficult. For any prophylactic intervention to be implemented effectively, guidance must be simple, straightforward, and logistically undemanding. Critical review during development of this guidance was provided by representatives of the National Association of County and City Health Officials, the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists, and representatives of the acute injury care, trauma and emergency response medical communities participating in CDC's Terrorism Injuries: Information, Dissemination and Exchange (TIIDE) project. The recommendations contained in this report represent the consensus of U.S. federal public health officials and reflect the experience and input of public health officials at all levels of government and the acute injury response community.

Alternate JournalMMWR Recomm Rep
PubMed ID18668022