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Exeter, NH Hospital Cited Over Hepatitis C Outbreak; First Testing Clinic Opens

STRATHAM, N.H. (AP) — The first New Hampshire Health Department clinic to test people for hepatitis C related to an outbreak at Exeter Hospital was opening Friday as a new report said the hospital failed to properly maintain supervision over narcotics.

The report by the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services says nurses at the cardiac catheterization laboratory, where the outbreak occurred, left syringes unattended. The hospital said in the report it has now changed its policy to place syringes in a secure location, where they will remain when medication is not being administered to patients.

State health regulators began investigating the hospital in June after it reported the hepatitis C outbreak among patients.

Former hospital technician David Kwiatkowski was arrested last month, accused of stealing drugs from the lab and infecting 31 patients with contaminated syringes. The 33-year-old former traveling medical technician, who also is infected with hepatitis C, worked in at least 18 hospitals in eight states.

The report said a nurse at the hospital was asked to demonstrate the type of syringe and blunt tip needle commonly used, and how each syringe is labeled with the name of the medication to be used. The nurse then showed how to withdraw drugs from a "Pyxis machine," a medication cart that includes a finger print scam and a password.

Once the machine was accessed, a vial would be dispensed with 2 milligrams of medication, would then be drawn up into the syringe.

The review found the failure to secure the drugs happened after the medication was dispensed form the machine and the medicine was placed on an unsecured cart in the lab procedure room, in the presence of technicians "who do not have authority to handle medications."

The review also found the medication might have been briefly left unattended while the staff member responsible for it was putting on a lead apron.

Exeter Hospital said under its new policy implemented on June 12, once the syringes are drawn up they must be placed in a secure draw located in the Pyxis machine until it is needed.

Kwiatkowski's name is not mentioned in the report, nor is any other staffer's. The report mentions that during a June 7 interview with a manager of the catheterization lab that one technician had three open lesions and a finger cut that needed stitches at times during the staffer's employment from date of hire on April 11, 2011, until May 16, 2012. The dates coincide with Kwiatkowski's employment.

The report says investigators learned from the June 7 interview the staffer "was asked to leave the work area several times due to weeping/discharge of fluids and blood-like stains" on the staffer's scrubs, including at least once during a procedure. There's a mention in a hospital report from September 2011 that an incision bled more than once from the staffer, that the staffer received medical attention for it and that the wound was healing as of March.

Kwiatkowski was fired on May 25. He previously worked in Arizona, Georgia, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, New York and Pennsylvania, and had been fired from two hospitals for drug-related incidents.

He is charged in New Hampshire with illegally obtaining drugs and tampering with a consumer product, but prosecutors have said they expect to bring more charges.

Kwiatkowski has told authorities he did not steal or use drugs.

After initially asking only cardiac lab patients to get tested, New Hampshire health officials now recommend that some 3,300 people who underwent surgery or were admitted to the intensive care unit during Kwiatkowski's employment get tested.

The first clinic was being held Friday and Saturday at the Cooperative Middle School in Stratham.

Clinics also will be held in Plaistow, Rochester and Manchester.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

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