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Exams |
Meetings | Training
| CME
CME
© Online CME* Modules
*CME is Continuing Micropigmentation™ Education
Micropigmentation™ is a tradename of the American Academy of Micropigmentation |
No. 1 History, Consultation, Patient Consent and Instructions Module
No. 2 Brow Module-Design, Hairstrokes
No. 3 Paramedical Module-Scars and Dry Needling
No. 4 Color Theory Module
No. 5 Eyeliner Module
No. 6 Lipcolor Module
No. 7 Blood Borne Pathogen and OSHA Practices Information module including hazardous waste disposal and needle stick injuries
No. 8 Equipment Module: Machines and Handtool (Tebori technique)
No. 9 Pigment Module
No. 10 Pain Control Module
No. 11 Cheek Color Pros/Cons Module
No. 12 Tattoo Removal Education Module
No. 13 Allergic Reactions Module
No. 14 Corrective Procedures Module-Color and Shape
No. 15 Camouflage Procedures Module-Scars, vitiligo
No. 16 Areola Module-Breast Restoration Module
No. 17 Needles for Micropigmentation Module
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Accidentally Stuck - What Should I Do? If you find yourself in this position, there are immediate steps you should take to protect your health.
Immediately following a needle stick injury, you should express blood from the site, then wash the site with soap and water.
After expressing blood and washing the site, call your doctor or visit an emergency room immediately. Treatments are available which may reduce your risk of infection with disease causing agents which may have been present on the needle. For maximal effectiveness, these treatments need to begin right away - preferably within two hours of the accident.
From: "Gayle McGinnis" <mmcginni@redcross-indy.org>
Date: Wed, 8 Oct 2003 12:09:59 -0500
To: <dixon@micropigmentation.org>
Subject: WE have updated our site
Our new web address follows. Would you be so kind as to update the
information?
http://www.redcross-indy.org/erts/browseOnline.asp?function=2&CourseID=2
The American Red Cross of Greater Indianapolis offers an industry
specific Blood Borne Pathogens course online 24/7. This course meets
OSHA requirements. Certificates are issued upon completion.
Note: In order to comply with OSHA requirements, AAM Certified OSHA Trainers are Karla Kwist and Dr. John Kercheval are available for direct telephone consultation with regard to your questions.
If any practitioner has an interesting
case study that they would like to contribute, please contact the
Academy for further information. All contributions will be given
proper credit on this web site or in our publication MicroNews.
Current case studies will be found under the heading: new issues
or New Clinical Corner
Tattooing and Hepatitis
C Alert
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 4 APRIL 2001
Contact: Mindy Baxter
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
Tatooing a major route of hepatitis C infection,
UT Southwestern researcher finds
DALLAS - April 4, 2001 - Getting a tattoo could
be a key infection route for hepatitis C, the most common chronic
viral infection affecting almost 2 percent of the United States
population, according to a study by a UT Southwestern Medical Center
at Dallas researcher.
Dr. Robert Haley, chief of epidemiology, writes
in the March issue of the journal Medicine that tattooing has been
previously overlooked as a widespread source of hepatitis C, a potentially
fatal disease that attacks the liver, leading to cirrhosis and liver
cancer. It affects 2 percent of the U.S. population.
The study found that people who had received a
tattoo in a commercial tattoo parlor were nine times more likely
to be infected with hepatitis C than people who did not have a tattoo.
Participants in the study were patients of an
orthopaedic spinal clinic, a setting that provided a large volume
of patients seeing a physician for reasons unrelated to blood-borne
infection. Participants unaware of their hepatitis status were examined,
interviewed for risk factors and tested for hepatitis C by the study's
co-author Dr. Paul Fischer.
Of 626 patients studied, 113, or 18 percent, had
a tattoo. Of those with a tattoo, 22 percent were infected with
hepatitis C. Of the 52 patients who had acquired their tattoos in
commercial tattoo parlors, 33 percent had hepatitis C. In contrast,
only 3.5 percent of patients with no tattoos had hepatitis C. Few
of the tattoo-associated infections could be traced to injection-drug
use, transfusions or other known routes of exposure.
"Prior studies were unable to account for
a substantial proportion of infections, perhaps 40 percent or more,
by the accepted risk factors like injection-drug use and transfusions,"
Haley said. "That suggested that important risk factors were
yet to be identified. Tattooing appears to be one of those. It has
proven to be an important route of infection in other countries,
but its role in the United States has received too little study
until now."
Patients in the study were asked questions about
the number of tattoos they had, the surface area covered by tattoos,
the colors in the tattoos and where they had received the tattoos.
Study participants also were asked about other possible hepatitis
C risk factors, including injection-drug use, prior blood transfusions,
sexual promiscuity, acupuncture, electrolysis, occupation, ethnic
factors, obesity and others.
The study found that people who had several tattoos,
or complex or large tattoos had an increased risk of having hepatitis
C and that people with white, yellow, orange or red pigments in
their tattoos also were more likely to have hepatitis C than those
with only black. These characteristics reflect tattoos acquired
in commercial tattoo parlors.
The risk of hepatitis C infection was also higher
among patients with a history of injection-drug use, hospital custodial
workers, and people who drank beer heavily, but the risk was not
increased for those who drank only wine or liquor. Although hepatitis
C can be transmitted by an infected blood transfusion, this route
of infection was too rare to show a discernable contribution to
the overall infection rate in the population at large.
"Most importantly, we found that commercially
acquired tattoos accounted for more than twice as many hepatitis
C infections as injection-drug use," Haley said. "This
means that it may have been the largest single contributor to the
nationwide epidemic of this form of hepatitis."
Hepatitis C can be passed through tattooing by
reuse of tattooing needles or dye, inadequate sterilization of tattooing
needles between customers, or breaks in sterile technique such as
the artist pricking the back of his or her hand to test the needle's
sharpness. Few states have hygienic regulations to ensure safe tattooing
practices in commercial tattoo parlors, and even fewer monitor and
enforce standards.
Patients for the study were interviewed and tested
in 1991 and 1992.
"The results of the study were not published
then because other epidemiological studies at the time were expected
to address the issue, but they did not," said Fischer. "This
was the last study done before widespread hepatitis C testing began,
when a largely unbiased study could still be done."
Hepatitis C presently causes as many as 10,000
deaths each year from cirrhosis and liver cancer, and this number
is expected to rise. Nearly 4 million Americans are chronically
infected with hepatitis C, and about 36,000 more become infected
each year.
Hepatitis C is a quiet killer. The vast majority
of people with new hepatitis C infection experience no symptoms
until many years later when they develop liver cirrhosis or liver
cancer. Only a small number initially develop the classic symptoms
of hepatitis, including jaundice, fatigue, abdominal pain, loss
of appetite and vomiting.
Doctors say people with any of the risk factors
for hepatitis C should consider having a blood test, because treatments
are now available to eradicate the virus in many before it causes
permanent liver damage or cancer.
Tattooing has been shown to transmit other infectious
diseases, including hepatitis B, syphilis, leprosy and tuberculosis.
Small outbreaks of hepatitis have been identified in customers visiting
certain commercial tattoo parlors on the same day.
Fine-art tattooing has become a common practice,
particularly among teen-agers and young adults. Sociological studies
of tattoo recipients, however, have shown that few recipients compare
tattoo parlors or watch a tattooing procedure before getting one,
and few consider tattooing a future health risk.
###
Haley is the study's lead author. Fischer is an internal medicine
specialist, formerly at the Dallas Spine Group and presently at
Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas.
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