HOW A DOCTOR INFECTS OVER 140 WITH HIV

An unlicensed Cambodian doctor, Yem Chrin, has landed himself in trouble after he allegedly infected 140 patients with HIV. According to Aljazeera report,  the fake doctor has been charged with murder after it was discovered that he was reusing needles and syringes to treat patients at his hospital.

It was gathered that Cambodian health authorities detected a mass HIV epidemic on December 9 and after they started tests in a community in Battambang province and found that children as young as two and people in their 80s had contracted the virus.
The rice farming community of Roka in northwestern Cambodia has so far seen 140 people test positive for the deadly virus in the past month, the report stated. The authorities were alerted about a possible mass HIV epidemic in the village after a 74-year-old man tested positive in November and started convincing others who had also visited the same practitioner to get tested. The 55-year-old local village doctor is said to have undergone basic medical training in 1980s from working in refugee health camps.
“We charged him with spreading the HIV virus to others, brutal murder and operating a medical service without a license,” Nuon San, the provincial court’s chief prosecutor, told Reuters.
Yem Chrin has admitted that he routinely re-used syringes. The case is a blow to Cambodia’s effort to cut the rate of HIV infections after the virus spread almost uncontrollably in the impoverished country during the 1990s.
The country was striving towards having no new cases of HIV by 2020. Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen was so taken aback by the the mass HIV infections in Roka that he gave a speech on Thursday saying he simply did not believe it was true, while also announcing a full investigation.
“It is not that we do not believe in our doctors and our equipment, but it is hard to believe,” he said. “I do not believe it.”
It was reported that the unlicensed doctor was trusted and liked by most of the villagers because he was said to allow the poor families in the village to pay him what they could, and when they could.
Flexible payment made his medical services, even without formal medical training, more popular than getting treatment at state-run health centres.
One of Yem Chrin’s daughters said that her father, who was called for questioning by police last week, remains in police custody.
“We suspect him because most of the people who received treatment from him are HIV positive,” said Sokha, one of Chrin’s family to test negative for the virus.

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