Singapore's largest hospital has apologised on Tuesday after 22
kidney patients were infected with hepatitis C, with four dying in a
rare outbreak at the prestigious facility.
The infections at the
government-run Singapore General Hospital (SGH) involved patients
admitted to one ward between April and June.
Hospital officials
said while the four fatalities had other serious conditions, they "are
not able to rule out the possibility" that hepatitis C could have been a
factor in their deaths.
Singapore's health care system has been rated among the best in Asia and government hospitals are well-funded.
Patients from around the world fly to Singapore for treatment at SGH and other hospitals.
"We
would like to apologise unreservedly for the grief, pain and anguish
this has caused our patients and their families," SGH chief executive
Ang
Chong Lye said in a statement.
The Ministry of Health (MOH)
has formed an independent committee to review the findings of an
internal investigation carried out by the hospital.
The Singapore
Tourism Board says foreign patients spent $584m in 2013 for treatment in
the country, which encourages "medical tourism".
The World Health
Organisation (WHO) website says the hepatitis C virus is bloodborne,
and the most common modes of infection are through "unsafe injection
practices, inadequate sterilisation of medical equipment and the
transfusion of unscreened blood and blood products".
About half a
million people die annually from hepatitis C-related liver diseases,
according to WHO, the United Nations' health watchdog.
Tuesday, October 06, 2015
4 die as Singapore hospital suffers wave of hepatitis C infections
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