| HIV POSITIVE
VETERAN WILL SUE VA A
Florida vet who claims he contracted HIV during a colonoscopy at
the Miami VA hospital said his attorneys have filed a notice that
he will sue.
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... For a detailed
history of the VA's contaminated equipment scandal, click here.
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Fla. veteran says he is HIV positive, will sue VA
By
LISA ORKIN EMMANUEL - Associated Press Writer
MIAMI -- A South Florida veteran who claims he contracted HIV
during an endoscopic colonoscopy at a Miami Department of Veterans
Affairs hospital said on Tuesday his attorneys have filed a notice
that he will sue the federal government.
Army veteran Juan Rivera, 55, claims he contracted HIV from the
procedure on or about May 19, 2008. Rivera said he had been tested
twice and both times he was positive for the disease.

Rivera is married with five grown children. He served in the Army
from 1976 to 1989 and now works as postal office transportation
specialist.
Ira H. Leesfield, an attorney for Rivera, said the notice filed
July 20 is necessary under the Federal Tort Claims Act. Rivera has
to give the federal government six months before he files a
federal lawsuit. Leesfield said the claim states Rivera will sue
for $20 million in damages.
The
notice said the incident was caused by "the carelessness and
negligence of the VA in cleaning and maintaining their equipment,
as well as failing to adopt and implement proper policies,
protocols and procedures."
"I think what we are looking for is a change of attitude, a change
of procedure, a change of commitment to the veterans," Leesfield
said.
Leesfield said the VA has responded by asking for Rivera's medical
records. A VA spokeswoman didn't immediately respond to telephone
or e-mail messages seeking comment.
The Department of Veterans Affairs has said that there is no way
to prove that the positive tests for infectious diseases stem from
exposure to improperly cleaned or erroneously rigged equipment for
colonoscopies at facilities in Murfreesboro, Tenn., and Miami or
while getting treatment at the ear, nose and throat clinic in
Augusta, Ga.
Rivera said shock and fear were his first reactions when hearing
he was HIV-positive.
"I was scared. I was upset. I was angry. The first thing that
comes to my mind is how long am I going to be alive? he told The
Associated Press. "I want to make sure this will never happen to
any other person. It's not fair."
The VA began warning about 10,000 former patients in February that
they may have been exposed to infections as far back as 2003.
Although the VA says the chance of infection was remote, the
patients were advised to get blood tests for HIV and hepatitis.
Records show that among the patients who have heeded VA warnings
to get follow-up blood checks, eight have tested positive for HIV.
Twelve former patients have tested positive for hepatitis B and 37
have tested positive for hepatitis C.
The VA has said the rate of infections is consistent with or less
than what would normally be found among similar populations. But
the agency is investigating the cases for connections.
The VA has said the errors were limited to the three states, but a
report by the agency's inspector general suggested more widespread
problems.
Even after the well-publicized scare, investigators conducting
surprise inspections in May found that only 43 percent of the
agency's medical centers had standard operating procedures in
place for endoscopic equipment and could show they properly
trained their staffs for using the devices.
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
contaminated equipment, HIV, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C
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