CDC
says some sickened after swallowing hand sanitizer
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[August 06, 2020]
(Reuters) - Fifteen cases of methanol
poisoning caused by swallowing alcohol-based hand sanitizers were
reported in Arizona and New Mexico in May and June, leading to four
deaths, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said
Wednesday.
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Hand hygiene has been promoted as an important way to curb the
spread of the coronavirus in the United States, and the CDC
recommends using alcohol-based sanitizer products to clean hands if
soap and water are not available.
All alcohol-based hand sanitizers approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) must contain only ethanol or isopropanol, but
some products imported into the country have been found to contain
methanol, the CDC said in a report.
The study warned that severe methanol poisoning can result in
blindness or death, and asked people to check whether their hand
sanitizers contained methanol. Three of the 15 poisoning case
patients in the Southwestern states were discharged with visual
impairment, the CDC said.
CDC worked with the two states to review poison center call records
and found 15 adult patients had taken an alcohol-based hand
sanitizer and been admitted to a hospital. All of them had a history
of swallowing alcohol-based hand sanitizer products.
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An earlier CDC survey taken shortly after President Donald Trump publicly asked
whether injecting disinfectants could treat COVID-19 found more than a third of
Americans misused such products to try to prevent infection.
The researchers said their findings point to the possibility of similar cases in
other states and localities, and recommended that safety messaging to avoid
ingestion of any alcohol-based hand sanitizer product should continue.
(Reporting by Vishwadha Chander in Bengaluru; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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