Healthcare personnel injured by needles or other sharps contaminated with blood from infected patients are at risk for infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), and other bloodborne pathogens.’ When such injuries also result in blood contamination of a patient's wound, mucous membrane, or skin lesion, transmission of infection in the opposite direction, from provider to patient, may occur.
Although HBV transmission from HBeAg- positive providers to patients during invasive procedures where the opportunity for injury and contamination coexists was documented as early as 1974, the hazard was not deemed large enough to warrant widespread changes in infection control practices or mandatory testing. Recent reports suggesting that HIV infection in three patients of a dentist with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) were acquired in the dental office have had a much more dramatic impact.