BBC News - Monday, 24 January, 2000
The union has identified five health workers who have contracted HIV in the past few years due to needle accidents.
Two of those have already died and the union has renewed its call for the introduction of safety syringes.
The union has written to the Scottish Executive's health committee asking for a meeting to look at bringing in the changes.
Union spokesman Jim Devine said: "Jane Robinson, a student nurse, died in 1996 as a result of a needlestick injury she received while working in hospital pathology department.
"She received ú187,000 compensation.
"Kathryn McCarthy also died in 1996 as a results of a needlestick injury. She was a nurse in the navy who also contracted HIV while taking a routine blood sample from a patient.
"She was recovering the syringe when she was jostled from behind and slipped, sticking the infected needle into the base of her thumb."
'Lives at risk'
Mr Devine said the "avoidable epidemic" was putting health service workers' lives at risk.
He added that technology, in the form of retractable safety syringes, was available and should be looked at in more death by the health committee.
Last month a report by a hospital carrying out tests of the safer needles warned that the costs were prohibitive.
The trials were commissioned by the Scottish Executive after allegations that more than 20,000 members of staff were being accidentally pricked by syringes each year.
Leaked report
The leaked report conceded that the new syringes were safer but voiced some concern about the extra cost.
The executive bowed to pressure and agreed to consider the results of a number of pilot projects across Scotland.
The first to report on their use was St John's Hospital in Livingston.
It stated that staff in four areas - including accident and emergency - found many advantages to the retractable needles.
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