No that is not what the manufacture (OraSure Tech) says. Now move on.
Teak,
and to justify the nurses explanation, he said that that is what the manufacturer says, up to 6 months......but on the Orasure website it says up to 3months..weird....just sharing...
Good day
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I wish everyone could get the memo and advise that 3months is the window period. the san francisco aids foundation still says it takes 2-3months for most people, BUT it can take up to 6 months. with such a huge pop. of hiv patients, you would think they would stick to 3 months.
Do not pull up and post to old threads.
Why then the baseline for Occupational exposures is up to 12 months?
Why then the baseline for Occupational exposures is up to 12 months?
Not all person with occupational exposure are given PEP.
Occupational Exposures Often involve a 28-day course of PEP (Post-Exposure Prophylaxis). The window period doesn't begin until the end of this course.
You were citing "occupational exposures" their testing guidelines are set by OSHA and their insurance companies and has nothing to do with nonoccupational exposures guidelines.
Dear Teak,
Thanks for your great job to help all of us!
Regarding this issue I also have the same confusion with bigdogdog. I found something as below:
"...HIV-antibody testing by enzyme immunoassay should be used to monitor HCP for seroconversion for >6 months after occupational HIV exposure. After baseline testing at the time of exposure, follow-up testing could be performed at 6 weeks, 12 weeks, and 6 months after exposure. Extended HIV follow-up (e.g., for 12 months) is recommended for HCP who become infected with HCV after exposure to a source coinfected with HIV and HCV..."
Here is the link for your reference and which is updated on 30 Spet. 2005: http://www.aidsinfo.nih.gov/Guidelines/GuidelineDetail.aspx?MenuItem=Guidelines&Search=Off&GuidelineID=10&ClassID=3
So, can you give some comments? Thank you very much!
There months is the guidelines setup by the mfg., FDA and the CDC. I don't believe you found a clinic in SF that uses 6 months. The SF City Clinic one of the largest follows the 3 month guidelines.
they are soooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo wrong. your clinic needs to update it's infomation. the cdc does NOT say 6 months is conclusive...that is the OLD guideline.
3 months IS conclusive.