LIFESTYLE NEWS - The South African National Blood Service (SANBS) have issued a warning about the serious dangers involved in the practice of 'bluetooth'.
This new drug-sharing trend involves drug users injecting themselves with blood drawn from another user who has recently taken the drug 'nyaope'.
Dr Jackie Thomson, Medical Director of SANBS, says the practice as two serious dangers:
• The risk of transmitting a blood-borne virus or pathogen is greatly increased when passing infected blood from one directly into the vein of another person. This is particularly a risk in South Africa which has one of the highest HIV infection rates in the world.
• Mixing incompatible blood types can be fatal.
The danger of mixing blood types
“Transfusing blood from one person to another in clinical settings is a very precise process and healthcare professionals ensure that the patient receives the right type of blood.
“Checks and tests needed to establish blood types are obviously not available to members of the public – including injecting drug users – and there is a real threat that the wrong and incompatible blood type is infused to the other person.
“This can cause different reactions including an attack on the immune system and severe blood clotting – resulting in various emergencies including shock, jaundice, collapse of the circulatory system, organ failure and death,” says Dr Thomson.