Risk of hepatitis B infection among medical and paramedical workers in a general hospital in Zimbabwe.

J C Emmanuel, M T Bassett, H J Smith
Author Information
  1. J C Emmanuel: Blood Transfusion Service, Harare, Zimbabwe.

Abstract

To evaluate the addition of hepatitis vaccine to health schemes for hospital workers in Zimbabwe we undertook a cross sectional study of viral markers in 226 hospital workers and compared the results with 97 volunteer blood donor controls. One hundred and thirty one (58%) hospital workers had hepatitis markers compared with 45 (46%) of the donor group. Racial group was the strongest risk factor. Blacks were 70% more likely to have markers than whites. This racial difference was not explained by job status or patient contact. Our data suggest that work in a district general hospital does not constitute a clinically important hazard for hepatitis B infection. Because of the high cost of the vaccine, additional studies to assess the risk of hospital work in other settings in Zimbabwe are required before health policy regarding routine hepatitis B vaccination is determined.

References

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MeSH Term

Black or African American
Black People
Blood Donors
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis B Antibodies
Hepatitis B Surface Antigens
Hospitals, General
Humans
Occupational Diseases
Personnel, Hospital
Risk Factors
Zimbabwe

Chemicals

Hepatitis B Antibodies
Hepatitis B Surface Antigens

Word Cloud

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