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February 1, 2002Volume 30, Number 16



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Study reaffirms value of using
bleach to rid needles of HIV virus

Despite reports to the contrary, clean water and full-strength bleach remain an effective means for injection drug users to disinfect syringes contaminated with the HIV virus, a Yale study has found.

For years, injection drug users were advised to bleach syringes as a way to reduce HIV transmission through shared needles. In the mid-1990s, however, there were several studies suggesting that bleach, at least in the way injection drug users were using it, was not effective in disinfecting syringes.

"As a result of these warnings, many programs that had distributed bleach stopped doing so," says Robert Heimer, senior author of the article in the December issue of the Journal of Acquired Immuno Deficiency Syndrome and associate professor in the Departments of Epidemiology and Public Health and Pharmacology at the School of Medicine.

To test the disinfection method, Heimer and his co-researchers developed a microculture assay sensitive enough to recover infectious HIV-1 from as little as 0.4 microliters of infected blood. Then syringes spiked with HIV-infected blood were rinsed with water and/or bleach, simulating the practice of drug injectors. The syringes are rinsed by drawing the liquid into the syringe and then squirting it out again.

"What we found is that for the type of syringe usually used by drug injectors, even a one-tenth diluted solution of bleach successfully disinfects the syringe if the solution is drawn in and squirted back out," Heimer says. "Even when we stacked the deck and left 10 times more blood in the syringe than is usually found, full strength bleach was effective in 152 of 153 attempts. We even found that rinsing three times with clean water reduced the likelihood of recovering live virus by 99%."

Coauthors of the study were principal investigator Nadia Abdala, associate research scientist in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health; John Carney, who recently received his Master of Public Health degree from Yale; and Alice Gleghorn, an epidemiologist with the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

-- By Jacqueline Weaver


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Institute gives Yale $9 million grant

Library invites public to share 'treasure' from poet Langston Hughes

Yale Concert Band to present tribute to Cole Porter

Alumnus' gift boosts international fellowship program

Goizueta Foundation endows professorship, scholarship fund


ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

Yale Commemorates 'Profound and Compelling Legacy' of Martin Luther King Jr.


MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS

IN FOCUS: Needle Exchange Program

Library exhibit pays tribute to alumnus and statesman Cyrus Vance

Next Yale Rep play is humorous tale of a haunted vacation


SCHOOL OF NURSING NEWS

Students will 'Stand Up and Dance' to benefit local AIDS organization

Tribute to The Tiger's Eye recalls 'The Art of a Magazine'

Gallery marks anniversary of major gift by recreating 1948 show

Exhibit celebrates ways language and visual form express human experience

Malbin Lectures to reflect on modernist art in America

Opera is a tribute to retired professor

Wexler awarded AHA prize for best book



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