Amy I am glad you're doing well.
We don't old blood unless we do so at the biobank.

Let me know if you need anything....
Terri



Sent from my Verizon 4G LTE smartphone


-------- Original message --------
From: Amy Olson <aolson9@jhmi.edu>
Date: 9/11/17 5:59 AM (GMT-05:00)
To: 'MCOH/EH' <mcoh-eh@mylist.net>
Subject: [MCOH-EH] Holding Blood for HIV testing for 90 days

Happy Monday from Florida,

Our hospital is doing well in St. Petersburg. Many thanks to people who have reached out.

 

As I wait for the sun to rise, I’m going through some things and I have a question. As I understand the BBP standard, we are required to hold an employee’s blood for 90 days so they could decide at a future date to have it tested for HIV. I have yet to run into a situation where an employee deferred testing, but now that I have direct responsibility for the Exposure Control Plan, I have more interest in ensuring what is written is something we can deliver. Our lab is continuing to research, but when I posed the question about holding blood and testing within 90 days, this is the response I got: “It’s not that we can’t hold a sample for 90 days. There isn’t a commercial ref lab that has validated this particular testing for a sample >30 days old. That seems to be the dilemma for HIV ½ analysis.”

 

What are other people doing? Am I misinterpreting the standard?

 

Thank you,

Amy Olson

Director, Employee Health and Wellness