Díaz Martínez Luis Alfonso, Cadena Afanador Laura del Pilar
Universidad Autónoma de Bucaramanga, Colombia.
Rev Gastroenterol Peru. 2003 Apr-Jun;23(2):107-10.
An anonymous, self-administered and voluntary survey was performed on medical students participating in the 17th International Scientific Meeting of the Latin American Federation of Scientific Societies of Medical Students, which took place in Lima, on October 2002. A total of 198 students responded, 150 of them were Peruvian. The results showed that 46.7% of these students have been exposed, at least once during the first nine months of 2002, to blood or body fluids; 29.4% of these cases were high risk expositions and none of these accidents were properly examined. Only 35.4% of the students surveyed reported having complete Hepatitis B vaccination. The high incidence of biological accidents among Peruvian students, added to the low degree of Hepatitis B vaccination and to the lack of adequate post-exposure care, places Peruvian medical students in high risk for acquiring Hepatitis B.
对参加2002年10月在利马举行的第17届拉丁美洲医学生科学协会国际科学会议的医学生进行了一项匿名、自我管理的自愿调查。共有198名学生回复,其中150名是秘鲁人。结果显示,这些学生中有46.7%在2002年的前九个月至少有一次接触过血液或体液;其中29.4%的情况属于高风险接触,且这些事故均未得到妥善检查。接受调查的学生中只有35.4%报告接种了完整的乙肝疫苗。秘鲁学生中生物事故的高发生率,加上乙肝疫苗接种率低以及缺乏充分的暴露后护理,使秘鲁医学生面临感染乙肝的高风险。