HIV Transmission through Unsafe Medical Injection in Rural Cambodia

Type Journal Article - International Journal of Health Sciences and Research
Title HIV Transmission through Unsafe Medical Injection in Rural Cambodia
Author(s)
Volume 7
Issue 8
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2017
Page numbers 521-526
URL http://www.ijhsr.org/IJHSR_Vol.7_Issue.8_Aug2017/80.pdf
Abstract
Objective: While most of people in other parts of the world would do anything to avoid getting
injected, but in Cambodia things are quite different, where people have the desire for injections and
intravenous drips. This study tries to describe people‘s health-seeking behaviour toward medical
injection in Cambodia.
Method: The study obtained with the investigation of The Cambodian National Center for
HIV/AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome), Dermatology and Sexually Transmitted Diseases
(NCHADS) investigated the outbreak in collaboration with the University of Health Sciences in
Phnom Penh and the member of Roka cluster of the investigation team.
Result: 242 confirmed HIV cases were identified with HIV, including 22% was children aged <14
years, and 21% were adults aged >60 years, 62% were in females. 4 women aged >60 years and one
girl aged 7 months died after their HIV diagnoses.
Conclusion: Unsafe injection left many people got HIV infected with unconscious the cause of
infection. This problem will educate patients about the hazard of unsafe injection and seek to reduce
their demand for injections, but knowledge alone may not be enough to break the habit. The principle
of ―first does no harm‖ should apply equally to health care worker and doctor.

Related studies

»