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Aids: Nurses seek transfer

By DELICE GAN

Delay admitting patients until centre is equipped, union urges

ABOUT 26 nurses have asked to be transferred out of the Communicable Disease Centre because they are afraid of dealing with Aids patients.

The nurses' union, the Amalgamated Union of Public Employees (ACPE), wants the Health Ministry to delay admitting patients with the Aids virus until the centre is equipped to have them.

Three men have been found to have the Aids virus, but they have not been admitted to hospital yet.

The ministry said last week that the three, all homosexual prostitutes, were "clinically well,” but it has been learnt that one of them is now feeling unwell and has symptoms of what is known as "Aids-related complex."

This is said to be the stage before the disease sets in fully, although it is still not known if the man will develop the full syndrome. It is also not known if he now needs hospitalisation.

ACPE General Secretary G Kandasamy said yesterday that if the men needed hospitalisation, they should be quarantined somewhere else, not at the Communicable Disease Centre in Tan Tock Seng Hospital.

"They should not be in the hospital where there are patients with other illnesses and who have relatives visiting them," he said.

The union was concerned about whether it was in the public interest to let the three men move about freely. "Aids is an infectious disease and it is incurable," Mr Kandasamy said.

It is understood that in a letter to the ministry, dated April 10, the union said that staff at the centre had not been briefed on procedures in handling Aids patients.

The union was worried that the ward earmarked for Aids patients, Ward 76, was not adequately equipped with staff safety in mind.

Among other things, the union pointed out that the nurses’ station and the patient care area were not clearly set apart.

It suggested that only staff who volunteer should be made to work in Ward 76. The union also called for a compensation scheme to be worked out for staff who may get the Aids virus during their work.

Mr Kandasamy said that he had not yet received a reply from the ministry.

A source at the Communicable Disease Centre said there was some panic among the nurses, who were not mentally prepared for the Aids patients.

The source said that the centre had only a few days' notice that the men may be hospitalised but preparations had been made to receive them.

The nurses had been assured that they would not be asked to take blood samples from these patients, thus reducing the risk of their getting the Aids virus if they accidentally pricked themselves while withdrawing blood.

Health Ministry officials could not be reached for comment yesterday.

• If Aids strikes Singapore — Section Two, Page One.

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This article was archived by Roy Tan.