Home » Opinion » Editorials
July 23. 2012 6:55PM
Hepatitis information: NH public should have more of it
It is good that law enforcement authorities have made an arrest in the hepatitis C outbreak at Exeter Hospital. That being said, it is unfortunate and counterproductive that those officials as well as public health officials seem to consider the public as children who should be told as little as possible about this significant threat to public health.
Case in point: Dr. Jose Montero, state public health director, says the suspect has worked as a traveling technician at laboratories in at least six states. Montero says he has been in touch with authorities in those six states. And what are those six states? Montero won’t say.
Right. Wouldn’t want the public to know more information about the previous whereabouts of this modern-day Typhoid Mary.
Likewise, U.S. Attorney John Kacavas said he would not identify the other states where the suspect, David Matthew Kwiatkowski, had worked. Kacavas said officials in those other states should make those decisions.
Really? Kacavas also told our Sunday News that one of the hospitals in one of those states that he won’t identify had caught the suspect “red-handed,’’ but did not have him prosecuted. So much for the sound decisions of others.
Kacavas also declined to name the company that had hired Kwiatkowski as a contract employee working at various facilities across the country.
The Union Leader found out that the company appears to be Triage Staffing out of Omaha, Neb. It has had no comment. The Union Leader and other news media have also spoken with hospitals in Michigan, Maryland and Georgia that believe the man worked there.
In a public health emergency, and this is certainly the case here, the more information the public has, the more informed the public is, and the more likely that the full picture of what has happened here and who might still be at risk is developed. Lives might actually be saved.
The fact that some public officials can’t see that, that they seem much more intent on making excuses for withholding information, is regrettable and insults the intelligence of the taxpayers who pay their salaries.
Case in point: Dr. Jose Montero, state public health director, says the suspect has worked as a traveling technician at laboratories in at least six states. Montero says he has been in touch with authorities in those six states. And what are those six states? Montero won’t say.
Right. Wouldn’t want the public to know more information about the previous whereabouts of this modern-day Typhoid Mary.
Likewise, U.S. Attorney John Kacavas said he would not identify the other states where the suspect, David Matthew Kwiatkowski, had worked. Kacavas said officials in those other states should make those decisions.
Really? Kacavas also told our Sunday News that one of the hospitals in one of those states that he won’t identify had caught the suspect “red-handed,’’ but did not have him prosecuted. So much for the sound decisions of others.
Kacavas also declined to name the company that had hired Kwiatkowski as a contract employee working at various facilities across the country.
The Union Leader found out that the company appears to be Triage Staffing out of Omaha, Neb. It has had no comment. The Union Leader and other news media have also spoken with hospitals in Michigan, Maryland and Georgia that believe the man worked there.
In a public health emergency, and this is certainly the case here, the more information the public has, the more informed the public is, and the more likely that the full picture of what has happened here and who might still be at risk is developed. Lives might actually be saved.
The fact that some public officials can’t see that, that they seem much more intent on making excuses for withholding information, is regrettable and insults the intelligence of the taxpayers who pay their salaries.
- Winnipesaukee watershed association looking to raise its profile - 0
- New Ipswich cemetery’s future is anybody guess after state objects to graves - 1
- Goffstown artisan gives new face to Wolfeboro tower - 0
- Town may have to fix grave error - 3
- Updated: Winning Powerball ticket sold in Fla.; 2, $1M tickets sold in NH - 0
- No more Winni whoppers: Fishing Derby winner will have to take lie detector test - 11
- Learning the way of the gun in Wakefield - 2
- Peterborough's renovated Adams Pool to open in June - 0
- Supreme Court says Manchester man who lost towed car while hospitalized can sue - 4
Suit: Claremont's North Country Smokehouse claims $606,011 spent on diamond, SUV, more
READER COMMENTS: 4- House passes auto dealers bill of rights - 1
- Rochester man facing up to 30 years in prison for brutal assault - 0
- Man who confronts burglar in Nashua gets bit - 0
- Police say Nashua man struck woman with Jeep - 0
- Last-minute lobbying frantic as House prepares for casino vote - 2
- Pease chosen to receive new KC-46A refueling tanker; to bring 100 jobs - 5
- FBI agent kills Florida man during questioning about Marathon bombing suspect - 2
- Police seek man they say passed counterfeit bill at Manchester mall - 1
- Lightning strikes home in Exeter - 0
House votes to ban lead sinkers and jigs over an ounce
READER COMMENTS: 1
Sorry, no question available



