Naval Hospital Shuts Down Its Blood Bank CDC Daily UpdateImportant note: Information in this article was accurate in 1997. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.

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Naval Hospital Shuts Down Its Blood Bank

New York Times (12/29/97) P. A13


Abstract: Following a negative report from the Food and Drug Administration, officials from the National Naval Medical Center have voluntarily suspended blood bank operations until at least February. The report, which summarized the FDA's annual audit of the medical center, cited clerical errors, as well as 126 units of blood that were not properly screened for HIV. Additionally, the report notes, 33 of those units are still unaccounted for. In response to the report, Commander Ryland Dodge, a spokesman for the center, explained the clerical errors were "discrepancies" that resulted from the center's "cumbersome and difficult" tracking system. He noted that the 126 blood units had been subjected to all normal HIV tests--except for one test that had only just been introduced- -and no one has been infected from the blood. The medical center is now installing a computerized tracking system for its blood bank.


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