[sci.med] HICN225 News Part 2/7

ATW1H%ASUACAD.BITNET@oac.ucla.edu (Dr David Dodell) (06/21/89)

--- begin part 2 of 7 cut here ---
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Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

counts  higher,  were  apparently able to suppress the AIDS virus and suppress
tumors called Kaposi's sarcoma as well.

                     AIDS Spawns An Epidemic Of Unconcern

  Several thousand doctors, medical researchers and health administrators have
gathered in Montreal this week for the fifth  international  AIDS  conference,
against  a background of a rapidly increasing number of worldwide AIDS cases -
and rapidly declining public interest in the disease,  at least in Europe  and
North  America.  Despite intense research,  no cure for the disease or vaccine
to prevent it is yet in sight.

   Politicians,  journalists and the general public are currently showing less
concern  about AIDS than at any point since the first interantional conference
in Atlanta in 1985, when the world was shocked into realising that the disease
was a serious threat to public health.

   "In the US there's now a familiarity with the disease  which  has  bred  an
undisguised  contempt  for  it,"  says  Dr June Osborn,  Dean of the School of
Public Health at the University of Michigan. "I even have people saying to me:
'Your life must becoming easier now that the epidemic is on the wane.'

   "Unfortunately society is not dealing successfully with AIDS,  but sweeping
it  under  the carpet.  The people whose business is to deal with the epidemic
remain in awe of the looming problems."

   Experts are becoming more  confident  about  estimating  the  size  of  the
epidemic  and  predicting its future growth,  as governments,  particularly in
Africa,  stop pretending that AIDS hardly exists and begin to welcome  medical
assistance  from  outside.  The  World  Health Organisation,  which expects to
spend Dollars 90 m this year on its Global Programme on AIDS,  estimates  that
between 5 m and 10 m people are now carrying HIV,  the virus that causes AIDS;
20 m are likely to be infected by the year  2000.  According  to  the  present
medical knowledge, most of them will eventually die of AIDS.

   The  number  of  AIDS cases reported to the WHO reached 152,000 last month,
but  the  true  total  is  believed  to be at least three times as great.  WHO
projections show the number of cases reaching 1 m by the end of 1991 and 3-4 m
by the end of the century.

   Although the US has much the largest number of official AIDS cases  -90,000
of whom about half have died - the epidemic there is still confined largely to
homosexual  men  and  people  who  inject  themselves  with illegal drugs.  In
Africa,  where the 23,000 reported cases probably  represent  lkess  than  one
tenth of the real total,  the vast majority have been infected by heterosexual
contact or by their mother in the womb.

   According to the Organisation Pan-Africaine de Lutte contre  Sida  (Opals),
based in Paris,  up to 30 per cent of young adults and 15 per cent of children
are now infected in some cities in central Africa.  Dr Michel Rosenheim, Opals
vice president, says the social effect will be devastating.

   "AIDS is affecting the most healthy and productive members of society,"  Dr
Rosenheim  says.  "It  is  not  a  disease  of  the poor like tuberculosis and

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malaria.  The future leaders of these African countries are going  to  die  of
AIDS."

   In  most  of  Europe  and North America the much feared "break out" of AIDS
into the non-drug-using heterosexual population  has  not  occurred.  Although
Europe  as  a whole remains about three years behind the US in the progress of
the epidemic,  different patterns are emerging in southern Europe,  where  the
disease  is  concentrated  among intravenous drug users,  and northern Europe,
where most victims are homsexuals.

   AIDS is beginning to spread through the Caribbean region as a  heterosexual
epidemic  on  the African model.  But perhaps the most disturbing new evidence
comes from Asia, the continent so far least touched by AIDS.  Tests on illegal
drug users in Bangkok show that the propotion infected by HIV has  risen  from
just 1 per cent in January 1988 to more than 50 per cent now.

   Dr  James  Chin,  head  of the WHO's AIDS surveillance unit,  says that the
Bangkok figures should finally destroy  the  myth  that  Asians  have  largely
escaped  infection because they are genetically less susceptible to the virus.
Since Bangkok is a centre for "sexual tourism," infection of the city's 50,000
drug users could spread AIDS rapidly through the region.

   Nations are divided as to what social policies should be  adopted  to  deal
with the disease.  So are employers and trade union officials,  who are having
to deal with AIDS as a labour relations issue.

   Cuba stands out as the  only  country  where  the  government  forces  AIDS
patients  to  live  apart from their families and friends in special sanatoria
until  they  die.  China  last  year  strengthened  local  legislation  making
homosexuality,  drug addiction,  and prostitution punishable by lengthy labour
re-education,  as a way of combating AIDS.  And mandatory testing is practised
in a growing number of states and countries including Bavaria, Bulgaria, South
Africa, Argentina, and the Soviet Union.

   So  far,  the US and most west European governments have resisted draconian
measures because of the political, social and legal implications,  quite apart
from the unproven medical effectiveness of compulsory testing.

   Companies  which openly declare that they screen potential recruits are the
exception rather than the rule.  Testing is  for  jobs  in  which  AIDs  could
arguably  affect  performance  and  put  public  safety at risk.  Examples are
British Airways and Texaco,  which have introduced screening  for  pilots  and
truck drivers respectively.

   US  employers  who  tried  to solve the problem of AIDS at the workplace by
firing those with the disease are now finding themselves on the wrong side  of
the  law.  Since 1986 an increasing number of states and several cities in the
US have made AIDS a "protected handicap" so that a large measure of protection
now surrounds the victim.

   The issue of AIDS dscrimination at the workplace has yet to be fully tested
in European courts.  However a report written by the international jurist, the
late Mr Paul Sieghart,  argues that a company which refuses  a  job  applicant
because  he  or  she  is  suspected of carrying the AIDS virus could be liable
under international human rights law.

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   Last year in one of the first cases of its kind in the UK, a homosexual who
was sacked because his colleagues feared he would give  them  AIDS  won  2,000
Pounds  (pds)  damages in an out-of-court settlement,  even though a court had
earlier ruled against him.

   On balance,  however,  most companies in Europe and the US are  adopting  a
conciliatory  approach  which  avoids  such  legal  minefields  and  minimises
disruption  in  industrial   relations.   This   concentrates   on   providing
information  about  the  facts  as  far  as  they are known and laying to rest
irrational fears about "catching AIDS" from contact at work.

   Life insurance companies,  on the other hand,  argue that  their  financial
health  depends  on  discriminating  against  clients  who are risk from AIDS.
Their attitude - and in particularly the way they have asked applicants  about
HIV  tests  -  has  put  the insurance industry in conflict with the organised
medical profession.

   The only drug so far licensed  by  government  authorities  to  treat  AIDS
directly is AZT (also known as Retrovir) made by Wellcome, a UK pharmaceutical
company.  But AZT,  which is used by about 30,000 people around the world,  is
far from perfect.  It causes unpleasant side effects,  such as severe anaemia,
in  many  AIDS  patients and it does not claim to cure the disease but only to
relieve some symptoms and prolong life.

   For the 70 bn pds-a-year world drug industry,  therefore,  the challenge is
to  come  up  with  a  product  that  will  improve  on AZT.  According to the
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of the US,  a total of  56  medicines
designed to treat AIDS and the secondary infections which accompany it are now
going  through  the  various  stages  of  the  Food  and Drug Administration's
approvals process.

   Designing an effective treatment for any virus is a  formidable  scientific
challenge.  Viruses  work  by  infiltrating  themsleves inside human cells and
hijacking the host cells' metabolic machinery to grow and reproduce.  They are
much more difficult targets than bacteria, which are independent cells and can
be killed by antibiotics without destroying the human cells around them.

   The way HIV can bury itself in the genetic material of the  cell  and  then
suddenly burst into lethal action after a delay of several years makes it hard
to  attack,  even  in  comparison with other viruses such as influenza and the
common cold for which no cures exist.  A "cure"  for  HIV,  in  the  sense  of
eradicating the virus from the genes of AIDS patients, may not be achieved for
several  decades;  but  most  researchers believe that they can develop a drug
which is free of side effects and whch suppresses all symptons of the disease.

   Several anti-viral  drugs  now  proceeding  through  the  final  stages  of
clinical  trials  look  as though they might have fewer side effects than AZT.
One of the most  promising  is  dideoxyinosine  (DDI),  under  development  by
Bristol-Myers  of  the  US.  Both  AZT  and  DDI  work  because they mimic the
chemical building blocks of the genetic material DNA.

   The new anti-virals are likely to be used in a "drug  cocktail"  containing
other  medicines  designed  to  stimulate  the  immune system and to fight the
secondary infections such as pneumonia which afflict AIDS patients.

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Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

   Developing a vaccine to prevent HIV infection may be  even  more  difficult
than  finding  an  effective  treatment.  Some  AIDS  specialists say that the
nature of the virus makes the quest for a vaccine hopeless.

   But 12 pharmaceutical companies are trying to develop an HIV vaccine in the
US.  And in the current issue  of  the  journal  Nature,  a  UK  team  led  by
Professor  Jeffrey Almond of Reading University reports encouraging laboratory
tests of a prototype vaccine based on a hybrid HIV-Polio virus.

   Although AIDS victims are understandably impatient that new drugs  are  not
emerging more rapidly from the billions of dollars spent on AIDS research, the
progress  made  since  HIV  was discovered six years ago has been astonishing.
And,  because of the cross-fertilisation with other areas of medical research,
future  beneficiaries could include anyone who suffers from a viral illness or
even cancer.

   The mood in Montreal, however, is far from triumphant.  In the absence of a
cure or vaccine, the only viable policy for containing the AIDS epidemic is to
persuade the public to avoid risky sexual  behaviour  and  stop  sharing  drug
needles.  That  depends on a high level of media and political interest in the
disease,  and AIDS specialists who  complained  that  journalists  overwhelmed
previous  international AIDS meetings are worried that there may not be enough
coverage this time.

                         HEALTH: AIDS CONFERENCE ENDS

   MONTREAL,  June 9 (IPS) -- "There is light at the end of the tunnel,"  U.S.
researcher   Dr.   Jonas  Salk  told  10,000  delegates  attending  the  fifth
International Conference on the Acquired Immune  Deficiency  Syndrome  (AIDS),
which ended here today.
   Though  Salk  stressed that no breakthrough was imminent,  he insisted that
headway was being  made  in  the  search  for  a  vaccine  against  the  Human
Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), which scientists believe causes AIDS.
   Salk is the U.S. researcher who in 1955 developed the poliomyelite vaccine.
In  recent  years he has been working with two other researchers toward an HIV
vaccine.
   "HIV infection is not necessarily a death sentence,"  Salk  told  delegates
from over 70 countries gathered at the "Palais des Congres" since June 4.
   At last year's fourth International AIDS Conference in Stockholm, Salk also
reported encouraging test finds.
   Throughout the meeting here, the largest of its kind on AIDS, researchers -
-  especially  from  the  U.S.  --  stressed that research on AIDS vaccines is
promising.
   But as Dr.  Mervyn Silverman,  president of the  U.S.  Federation  of  AIDS
Research, put it, "We're not there yet."
   In fact, said Dr.  Robert Gallo of the U.S.  National Cancer Institute, the
public should not  expect  any  more  major  scientific  headway  against  the
syndrome and the virus.
   "There will be new findings, but the major things we need are done...  It's
a problem of technology and time,  and testing this or that in certain numbers
of ways," Gallo said.
   Dr.  Gallo and Luc Montagnier of Paris' Pasteur Institute are credited with
the 1984 discovery of HIV.

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   Organized by the "International AIDS Society" (IAS) and  the  World  Health
Organization  (WHO),  the five-day Montreal meeting mainly focused on new AIDS
drugs.
   Besides "AZT," and "Zidovudine" for combating AIDS virus infections,  there
are an estimated 60 new drugs in or near clinical testing in AIDS patients.
   As  the  fifth  International Conference on AIDS was winding down today and
delegates  began  checking-out  of  hotels,  many  echoed  the  opinion  of  a
Senegalese researcher.
   "Very few new things were revealed here," noted Dr.  Alpha Sy, of Senegal's
Epidemiology and Statistical Research Unit.
   The next AIDS conference is scheduled for June 20-24, 1990 in San Francisco
where the fatal disease was first reported in 1981.

                          INFANT MORTALITY IN UGANDA

More than half of all deaths in Uganda each year are among children under five
years, according to a recent UNICEF study.

Entitled "Health Situation on Children in Uganda," the draft situation analysi
says that a 1988  survey  found  one  fourth  of  the  deaths  among  families
interviewed in 1987, occurred in children below one.

In 1987, national figures show that infant mortality in this age group was 104
per 1,000.  However, the death rate for children below two years of age was 12
per 1,000, according to the study.

The  major  causes of death for all ages are diarrhoea,  tetanus,  measles and
acute respiratory diseases.  The Ugandan government spends some  four  million
U.S. dollars each year on immunization and primary health care programmes.

While  deaths  of children older than one month are mostly related to measles,
diphtheria, tuberculosis, polio, whooping cough and tetanus, the causes of hig
perinatal and neonatal mortality rates are primarily the result of poor health
and nutritional  status  of  mothers,  complicated  deliveries  and  neo-natal
tetanus.

UNICEF's Information and Communications Officer in Kampala Sheba Rukikaire say
that  although  measles  has been responsible for more infant and child deaths
over the past 10 years,  statistics show that mortality has  been  reduced  by
immunization.  Vaccination coverage for measles has increased from 17 per cent
in 1985 to over 50 per cent by 1988, she adds.

Source: UNICEF, Kampala

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Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

===============================================================================
                      Center for Disease Control Reports
===============================================================================

                     Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
                            Thursday  June 15, 1989

                        Epidemiologic Notes and Reports
              Common-Source Outbreak of Giardiasis -- New Mexico

    In April 1988, the Albuquerque Environmental Health Department and the New
Mexico Health and Environment Department investigated  reports  of  giardiasis
among members of a church youth group in Albuquerque. The first two members to
be  affected  had  onset  of  diarrhea on March 3 and 4,  respectively;  stool
specimens from both were positive for Giardia lamblia cysts. These two persons
had only  church  youth  group  activities  in  common.  Routine  surveillance
identified no other cases associated with the church youth group.
    The youth group had dinner once a week at the church; food was prepared by
parents of group members.  The number of attendees at each meal varied, and no
record of who attended was kept. A survey of all families attending the church
sought to identify any family members who had eaten at any youth group dinners
in March and any who had had diarrhea since  February  1,  1988.  One  hundred
forty-eight persons who attended at least one youth group dinner in March were
interviewed about food they had eaten at the meal(s); the 42 persons reporting
diarrheal illness were interviewed about details of their illness.
    A  case was defined as diarrhea and/or abdominal cramping with onset after
February 1, 1988, lasting greater than 7 days and/or a stool specimen positive
for Giardia cysts. Twenty-two (15%) persons met the case definition.  Onset of
illness occurred from March 3 to March 30 (Figure 1),  and illness lasted 1-32
days (median:  20 days).  Twenty-one (19%) of 108 persons who  ate  the  youth
group  dinner  on  March  2  developed an illness meeting the case definition,
compared with one (3%) of  40  who  did  not  eat  that  meal  (relative  risk
(RR)=7.8, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.1-55.9, p=0.02).
    For the 21 ill persons who had eaten the March 2 dinner, the most frequent
symptoms reported were fatigue (95%),  diarrhea (91%), abdominal cramps (57%),
bloating (57%),  and weight loss (67%).  Patients ranged in age from 11 to  58
years (median:  39 years);  14 (67%) were female;  15 (71%) sought care from a
physician.  Fourteen (67%) patients submitted  stool  specimens  for  ova  and
parasite  examination;  10  (71%)  specimens  were positive for Giardia cysts.
Seven of the stool  specimens  were  also  tested  for  Shigella,  Salmonella,
Campylobacter, and Yersinia, and all were negative.  One ill person attended a
day-care center,  one had household contact with a day-care  center  attendee,
and none had consumed surface water.

    The  foods  served  at  the  dinner  on March 2 included tacos (with meat,
onions, tomatoes, lettuce, cheese, salsa,  sour cream,  and tortillas),  corn,
peaches,  cupcakes,  soft  drinks,  coffee,  and  tea.  No  food  samples were
available for microbiologic testing.  Persons who became ill were more  likely
to  have  reported  eating lettuce (RR=8.1,  CI=1.1-57.3),  salsa (p less than
0.01),  onions (RR=4.2,  CI=1.9-9.1),  or  tomatoes  (RR=3.5,  CI=1.4-8.8)  or
drinking   tea/coffee  (RR=5.5,   CI=2.3-13.4).   Water  consumption  was  not
associated with illness.  Lettuce,  onions,  and tea/coffee were most strongly
associated with illness by logistic regression analysis.
    Except  for  the  commercially  prepared salsa,  the implicated foods were
prepared in the church kitchen.  The lettuce and tomatoes were rinsed  at  the

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kitchen's  main  sink;  the outer leaves of the lettuce were removed;  and the
lettuce,  tomatoes,  and onions were chopped on the same cutting board,  which
was  not  washed  between items.  The dinner was prepared by eight women whose
children were in the youth group;  all ate the meal.  Although the  woman  who
prepared  the  lettuce  and  tomatoes  taught  preschool  and  had  a child in
preschool, neither she nor her child was ill when the meal was prepared.  None
of the eight food preparers reported symptoms at the time of meal preparation;
however,  five  became  ill  with  diarrhea  after  March  8.  Three had stool
specimens positive for Giardia cysts.
    The church is  on  the  municipal  water  system.  A  survey  of  possible
connections  between  the church's potable water system and the sanitary sewer
system identified five potential  cross-connections.  However,  water  samples
taken  at the time of the cross-connection survey had adequate chlorine levels
and were negative for coliform bacteria.  On April 4,  after the investigation
began,  the  church  stopped  using  municipal water for consumption and began
catering meals.  After elimination of all cross-connections,  every outlet was
flushed  simultaneously  for  3  hours.   No  new  cases  occurred  after  the
remediation measures were completed.

Reported by:  DJ Grabowski, MS, KJ Tiggs, JD Hall, DrPH,  HW Senke,  AJ Salas,
Albuquerque Environmental Health Department;  CM Powers,  JA Knott, Bernalillo
County District Health Office; LJ Nims, Scientific Laboratory Div;  CM Sewell,
DrPH, Acting State Epidemiologist, New Mexico Health and Environment Dept. Div
of Field Svcs, Epidemiology Program Office, CDC.

Editorial Note: In this apparent point-source outbreak of giardiasis, the most
likely  vehicle  of  transmission  was taco ingredients.  Although all the ill
persons ate the commercially  prepared  salsa,  salsa  was  unlikely  to  have
transmitted  Giardia cysts because the cysts would not remain viable after the
pasteurization and canning processes.

    Two explanations for the contamination are possible. First, if the potable
water was contaminated,  the lettuce and tomatoes could have been contaminated
when  washed.  Because the lettuce,  tomatoes,  and onions were all cut on the
same  board,  cross-contamination  could  have  occurred.   However,   because
plumbing   changes   were   made   before   completion  of  the  epidemiologic
investigation, this hypothesis could not be tested.  Second,  if the woman who
prepared  the  lettuce  and tomatoes was infected and excreting Giardia cysts,
she could have contaminated the vegetables during preparation.  However,  this
mode  is  less  likely  because this woman had acute onset of diarrhea 10 days
after the meal, suggesting a new infection at that time.
    Only two reported outbreaks of giardiasis have been associated with  food:
canned  salmon  (1)  and  noodle salad (2).  In both outbreaks,  contamination
occurred when food was mixed with bare hands.  Waterborne outbreaks of Giardia
are  well  documented,  and  persons  consuming untreated surface water are at
increased risk for developing giardiasis (3). Person-to-person transmission is
also well known in day-care and  institutional  settings  (4).  Public  health
officials  should consider foodborne transmission when investigating outbreaks
of giardiasis.

References

1.  Osterholm MT,  Forfang JC,  Ristenen TL,  et al.  An outbreak of foodborne
giardiasis. N Engl J Med 1981;304:24-8.

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2.  Petersen  LR,  Cartter  ML,  Hadler  JL.  A food-borne outbreak of Giardia
lamblia. J Infect Dis 1988;157:846-8.

3.  Craun GF.  Waterborne giardiasis in the United States: a review.  Am J Pub
Health 1979;69:817-9.

4. Pickering LK, Woodward WE. Diarrhea in day care centers. Pediatr Infect Dis
1982;1:47-52.

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Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

Current Trends Problems Created by Heat-Inactivation of Serum Specimens Before
                            HIV-1 Antibody Testing

    Among laboratories testing for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)
and  participating  in  CDC's  Model  Performance  Evaluation  Program  (1,2),
responses from May and September  1988  survey  questionnaires  show  that  40
(3.9%)  of  1034  and  41  (3.9%)  of  1052 respondents,  respectively,  heat-
inactivate serum specimens before testing for HIV-1.  Heat-inactivation is  an
effective  means  of  destroying  HIV-1  (3)  and  is  used  both  to  prepare
therapeutic blood products and to produce certain  laboratory  quality-control
testing materials;  however, this method is not recommended as a routine means
of protecting the safety of laboratory workers exposed to blood and other body
fluids while performing their jobs. Instead, laboratorians are urged to follow
universal precautions recommending that all blood  be  considered  potentially
infective (4,5).
    Heat-inactivation  of  serum  specimens before they are screened by enzyme
immunoassay (EIA) for HIV antibody  can  give  false-positive  results  (6,7).
Thus,  laboratories that continue heat-inactivating serum are likely to obtain
false-positive results with some EIA kits (6,7).  Heat-inactivation  can  also
interfere  with Western blot analysis (8).  Universal precautions preclude the
necessity of selective treatment such as heat-inactivation for specimens  from
persons considered to be at increased risk for infection with HIV-1, hepatitis
B  virus,  or  other diseases caused by bloodborne pathogens.  Therefore,  CDC
recommends that laboratories emphasize the practice of  universal  precautions
(4,5)   rather   than  heat-inactivation  of  serum  to  prevent  occupational
transmission of HIV.

Reported by: Div of Laboratory Systems, Public Health Practice Program Office,
CDC.

References

1.  Taylor RN,  Przybyszewski VA.  Summary of the Centers for Disease  Control
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) performance evaluation surveys for 1985 and
1986. Am J Clin Pathol 1988;89:1-13.

2.  Schalla  WO,  Hearn  TL,  Griffin CW,  Taylor RN.  Role of the Centers for
Disease Control in monitoring the quality  of  laboratory  testing  for  human
immunodeficiency virus infection. Clin Microbiol Newsletter 1988;10:156-9.

3.  Martin LS, McDougal JS, Loskoski SL.  Disinfection and inactivation of the
human T lymphotropic virus type III/lymphadenopathy-associated virus. J Infect
Dis 1985;152:400-3.

4.  CDC.  Recommendations for prevention of HIV  transmission  in  health-care
settings. MMWR 1987;36(suppl 2S):3S-18S.

5.  CDC. Update: universal precautions for prevention of transmission of human
immunodeficiency virus,  hepatitis B virus,  and other bloodborne pathogens in
health-care settings. MMWR 1988;37:377-82, 387-8.

6.  Evans  RP,  Shanson  DC,  Mortimer  PP.  Clinical evaluation of Abbott and
Wellcome enzyme linked immunosorbent assays for detection of serum  antibodies
to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). J Clin Pathol 1987;40:552-5.

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7.  McBride JH,  Howanitz PJ,  Rodgerson DO,  Miles J, Peter JB.  Influence of
specimen treatment on nonreactive HTLV-III sera.  AIDS  Res  Hum  Retroviruses
1987;3:333-40.

8.  Goldfarb  MF.  Effect  of  heat-inactivation  on  results  of HIV antibody
detection by Western blot assay. Clin Chem 1988;34:1661-2.

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Volume  2, Number 25                                            June 20, 1989

Epidemiologic Notes and Reports Work-Related  Injuries  and  Illnesses  in  an
               Automotive Parts Manufacturing Company -- Chicago

    In 1985,  146 work-related injuries and illnesses occurred among  the  349
full-time workers in an automotive parts manufacturing company in Chicago. The
company's injury/illness rate of 41.8 cases per 100 full-time workers per year
was  more than four times greater than the 1985 industry average of 10.1 cases
per 100 workers,  as reported by the Bureau of  Labor  Statistics  (BLS),  for
companies manufacturing motor vehicle parts (1).
    In  March  1986,  the  company  requested  that  the Rush-Presbyterian-St.
Luke's Occupational  Health  Centers  in  Chicago  evaluate  its  1985  injury
experience.  Examination of workers' compensation records, Occupational Safety
and Health Administration  (OSHA)  records,  medical  reports,  and  insurance
records  showed  high  rates  of  musculoskeletal  and  dermatologic injuries,
including sprains/strains (11.2 per 100 full-time workers), contusions (10.0),
and cuts/lacerations (5.4).  The most commonly affected body  parts  were  the
finger (10.3 per 100 full-time workers), back (6.3), and hand (4.6).

    The  most  prevalent  nature-of-injury categories (e.g.,  sprains/strains,
contusions,  cuts/lacerations) were further  evaluated  for  the  most  common
sources (e.g.,  boxes,  metal items,  machines) and types (e.g., overexertion,
being struck by an object) of injury.  Fifty-four percent  of  sprains/strains
were associated with boxes;  87%,  with overexertion (i.e., excessive physical
effort associated with  the  lifting,  pushing,  or  pulling  of  an  external
object).  Forty percent of contusions were associated with boxes; 46% resulted
from having been struck by an object.  Fifty-eight percent of cuts/lacerations
were associated with contact with metal items.
    In  March 1986,  simultaneous with the analysis of its 1985 injuries,  the
company modified its procedures for handling materials. These changes included
1) a decrease in the size of the boxes used to transport automotive parts,  2)
a decrease in the average weight of the boxes from 50 to 25 pounds, and 3) the
installation  of manual conveyors and lift assists designed to decrease manual
lifting requirements.  The company also sponsored regular  plant  inspections,
safety films, lectures, and various safety contests.
    In  April  1988,  the  company's  1986  injury  experience was analyzed to
evaluate the effectiveness of the interventions.  From  workers'  compensation
forms,  OSHA  records,  and  medical  reports,  44  work-related  injuries and
illnesses were identified among the  company's  321  full-time  workers.  Even

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