Sanitation
1.1
Can I get infectious diseases
from tattoo needles?
1.2
What to look for in a sanitary
shop environment.
1.3
Can I get AIDS from tattooing?
1.4
Can my tattoos get infected?
1.5
How to look for sterilization
1.6
Are there any medical
conditions that will preclude me from getting a tattoo?
1.7 What is the Alliance of Professional Tattooists?
1.8
Should I get a vaccination shot
against hepatitis?
1.1
Can I get
infectious diseases from tattoo needles?
There has been some concern
recently regarding transmittable diseases (particularly Hepatitis-B and AIDS
[HIV]) and tattoo shops. Just as in a dentist’s office, as long as the area is
strictly sanitized, your chances for infection will be greatly reduced.
Note: If
you plan on getting lots of bodyart (pierces or tattoos), you should seriously
consider getting immunized against Hepatitis-B. Hep-B is a much more serious
concern than HIV as the virus is much more virulent and easier to catch.
1.2
What to look for
in a sanitary shop environment.
The
current popularity of tattooing and body piercing has also brought on an increase
in potentially hazardous conditions. For this reason, I am posting the following
guideline of what to look out for (in this situation, “artist” refers to both
tattooists and piercers):
- Lighting: The area must be well-lit so the artist can see what s/he
is doing.
- Counter and floor space should be lightly colored, preferably white
so dirt shows up easier.
-
The spray bottle the artist
uses on your skin should be disinfected between customers, or some kind of
protective film such as Saran Wrap should be used.
-
Disposing needles: All needles
must be either discarded after EACH use (or at least with each new customer),
or autoclaved. Many body piercers operate out of small booths and may not have
spent money for an autoclaver, in which they MUST dispose of each needle. NO
EXCEPTIONS. Reusing piercing needles is equivalent to sharing IV drugs with
strangers.
-
Needles touching other things:
The needles, once open from their sanitary packages, must not be placed on
unsanitized surfaces. The piercer should NOT set the needle down on the table,
or, heaven forbid, DROP THE NEEDLE ON THE FLOOR!!! If this happens, insist they
open a new needle.
- Gloves: The artist must wash their hands prior to putting on their
gloves, preferably with an antibacterial/antiseptic solution. Once they put
their gloves on, they should not touch anything other than your skin, the
needle, and the jewelry. They should not be filling out receipts beforehand, or
answering the phone--unless these have been wiped clean beforehand.
- Is there a sink separate from the bathroom sink? -Does the artist
use a disposable razor when shaving skin?
-
The Speed Stick used as an
ahesive for the tattoo pattern should not be directly applied to the skin, but
applied first to a tissue which can then be used on the skin. -Autoclaves
should be inspected regularly.
- Sterile materials should be stored in sealed containers away from
things that could cause body fluids or ink to splash on them -The palate that
holds the ink caps should be covered with Saran Wrap -After tattooing, the ink
caps should be discarded and the ink not reused or poured back into the bottles
Be
particularly wary of “outdoor fair booths.” While many are run by caring, experienced
artists, these booths allow fly-by-night operators to make some fast money and
disappear. If you don’t know the artist, spend time watching them work on
others first. Are they reusing needles? Do they use needles that have dropped
on the ground?
1.3
Can I get AIDS
from tattooing?
IMPORTANT NOTE: This section
refers to tattooing specifically, and not to other forms of bodyart. Some, such
as piercing and cutting, require the breaking of the client’s skin to a deeper
level than what is achieved with a modern tattoo machine.
This
section on AIDS & Tattooing has been contributed by Nick “Buccaneer” Baban , who studied at
the Univ. of Michigan School of Public Health, Dept. of Epidemiology. He spent
the summer researching AIDS and IV drug use in NYC. “I’m not an expert, but I
consider myself knowledgable. Any furthur questions about AIDS can be e-mailed
to me.”
Obviously
there is some concern about AIDS and tattooing because when you get a tattoo,
you bleed. But the mechanism of transmission needs to be better understood.
AIDS is transmitted by intimate contact with bodily fluids, blood
and semen being the most comon. Intimate contact means that the fluid carrying
the AIDS virus (HIV) enters into your system.
Injection drug users (IDUs)
use hollow medical syringes and needles to inject drugs directly into their
bloodstream. It is common practice to withdraw a little blood back into the
syringe to delay the onset of the high. When needles are passed from IDU to IDU
and reused without sterilization, some of that blood remains in the syringe
and is passed on to the next user. If infected blood is passed, the recipient
can become infected with HIV, which leads to AIDS.
Tattooing
is VERY different from injecting drugs. The needles used in tattooing are not
hollow. They do, however, travel back and forth through a hollow tube that acts
as an ink reservoir. The tip of the tube is dipped into the ink, which draws a
little into the tube. As the needle withdraws into the tube, it gets coated
with ink. When it comes forward, it pierces your skin and deposits the ink. You
then bleed a little through the needle hole. This happens several hundred times
a second.
You are
only at risk of infection if you come in contact with infected blood. Since it
is only *your* skin that is being pierced during the tattooing process, only
*your* blood is being exposed. This means that the only person at greater risk
is the artist, because s/he is the only one coming in contact with someone
else’s (potentially infected) blood. This is why reputable (and sane) tattoo artist
wears surgical gloves while working.
Another
source of infection is through the use of infected tools. *This is why it is
IMPERATIVE that you make sure your tattoo artist uses sterile equipment.*
Needles and tubes need to be autoclaved before EACH AND EVERY time they are
used. Ink should come from separate cups and not directly from the bottle. Any
leftover ink should be disposed of and not reused under ANY circumstances.
The key
to HIV transmission is *transfer of bodily fluids.* Evidence indicates that
infection may require a (relatively) substantial ammount of fluid to be passed.
A pin prick almost certainly won’t do it. HIV is also a very fragile virus that
cannot survive long outside the human body, and is very easy to kill via
autoclaving. (I have heard of using bleach to sterilize needles. While bleach
is an effective HIV killer, I’m not sure of the procedures for cleaning the
equipment after bleach cleaning. As I personally have no desire to have bleach
put under my skin, I go with autoclaving as the proper way to sterilize).
If your tattooer maintains sterile conditions and proceedures, there
is almost no risk of infection. I say “almost” because any risk, no matter how
miniscule, is still a risk and must be recognized. That said, I am the proud
owner of a Jolly Roger tattoo on my right shoulder because I knew my tattooist
and knew he had sterile conditions.
Not as
long as you take care of your new tat. There is a section in the FAQ that
covers healing methods in depth. Some people have trouble healing tattoos with
colors they are allergic to. If it gets infected and refuses to heal after a
few days of using a topical antibiotic, you may want to check with a doctor.
Keep in mind this assumes you are a healthy individual without any condition
that suppresses your immune system.
1.5
How to look for
sterilization
Check out
the shop thoroughly. Don’t be lulled into a false sense of security by a clean
look. If the needles are not disposed of after each person, then it MUST be
“autoclaved.” Autoclaving is a process that pressurizes the instruments and
kills any virus or bacteria that might transmit viruses or bacteria. My dentist
has two auto- clavers--one gas and one steam--both pressurizing down to 250fsw.
He also has spore samples that he autoclaves and sends to a pathology lab to
make sure the machines are working.
Ask the
artist how they clean their needles. If they don’t say they autoclave, you are
taking your risks. If they say they do, ask to see their machine. Note that in
some states, autoclaving is required by law. Other common-sense types of things
include throwing out the ink after each customer. Make sure the artists have
small wells for each ink color that they dispense from a larger container, and
that these are thrown out after work on you is done. Compare the conditions of
the shop to that of your dentist--does the artist wear gloves? Are the areas
sprayed clean?
According
to the Navy Environmental Health Center Medical Corps in Norfolk, Virginia,
each year, a few cases of Hep-B are reported in people who’ve gotten tattoos
within the last two months, but they have not been able to trace the disease
back to its source, nor attribute it directly to the tattoo.
Becky Fenton says: “I spoke with a disease infection specialist at Kaiser [Permanente--US
West Coast health care system], and there have not been any incidents (as of
1990) of HIV being spread *to* a recipient of a tattoo. If you think about it,
the tattooist is much more at risk, as s/he has to touch the customer’s blood.
David Zinner notes that a blanket statement regarding the use of autoclaves could be
misleading. While an autoclave will kill the HIV virus, it is not because of
the efficacy of the ‘clave, but because of the weakness of that particular
virus. Far more insidious is Hepatitis, which is more tenacious, and which a
‘clave does not always kill. He has gotten all of his info from CDC, by the
way.
The
irony, he says, is that now virtually anyone can afford a ‘clave, because many
hospitals are selling them secondhand for a very good price, and switching
either to disposables, or purchasing dry-heat or chemical sterilizers. Chemical
is the best rated, and he says that his friend’s business has increased because
of the precautions he takes.
In
response to David’s well-founded concern, Dr. Milton Diamond from the UH School of
Medicine who has been researching sexuality for 30 years, says: Hepatitis is
easier to transmit than HIV but all the bugs will be killed IF the autoclave is
run properly (i.e., set hot enough & long enough). Some instruments can
not, however, be autoclaved since they cant take the heat. These have to be
sterilized with viracides, “bug”acides and so forth. In any case, here in the
States, EVERYONE should be using disposable needles.
The chemical bath is only as effective as how fresh is it, how
concentrated, what chemicals, how “dirty” or contaminated the instruments, how
long in the bath, which particular bug is under attack, etc. It is not the
device, autoclave or chemical bath, that is as important as the operator. There
are many different bugs out there. HIV may be one of the most deadly and Hep
among the more easily transmitted but many others have to be considered
(including Chlamydia, the infection rate of which is 20%!) and “he who aims at
one, hits one.” “Mo betta aim fo dem all.”
If the
artist or piercer is conscientious, reliable and knowledgeable, either device
could serve. Again my general rule still stands: “EVERYONE should be using
disposable needles.”
Dr. Kai Kristensen says: The needles that push the ink into the skin (below the epidermis or outer
covering and into the mid-dermis or support structure under the epidermis) can
transmit disease UNLESS STERILE TO BEGIN WITH. When they have been used on you,
whatever bugs you carry in your blood can be transmitted to the next person.
The most commonly transmitted disease by needlestick is Hepatitis B (and C).
Clearly AIDS could be transmitted even though not documented yet to my
knowledge.
The skin should be cleaned with antibacterial soap and water and
scrubbing before the procedure to lessen the normal population of germs on the
hide. Alcohol doesn’t do much but tends to degrease and cool, so no harm but no
substitute.
USE OF
DISPOSABLE GLOVES: A conscientious, professional tattooist or piercer will
often go through A DOZEN DISPOSABLE GLOVES on one client. Gloves SHOULD be
changed every time they touch unsanitized items with their gloves. If you see
that the artist does not change gloves after answering the phone, they are not
being sanitary. Marginally acceptable is if they pick up the phone (or other
objects, such as pencil) with a tissue. Optimally, they should use a new pair
of gloves after each potential contamination.
1.6
Are there any
medical conditions that will preclude me from getting a tattoo?
If you have hemophilia. There
is even a case of a man who was HIV positive who got a tattoo--if you are HIV+
however, you will want to inform the artist, since it’s the artist that is at
more risk than you. [In the case of the HIV+ man, he was John Baldetta, a
former nursing assistant at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, who got a tat
on his forearm that said “HIV Positive.” He was suspended for three days
without pay and told he could return if he covered up the tat. He refused and
was subsequently fired, although he was not an RN and was not doing anything
that would put patients at risk.]
However,
it is best to let the artist know if you have ANY medical condition, such as
diabetes or epilepsy, in case of an emergency.
If you have
multiple allergies, you can always have the artist do a “patch test” on you
with the colors you want prior to returning for a regular tattoo. This is similar
to patch tests done for perms and hair coloring, and will help you determine if
your body will react to some of the pigments.
Also, it is generally not
considered a good idea to tattoo pregnant women.
1.7
What is the
Alliance of Professional Tattooists?
This
section was contributed by Pat Sinatra, a professional tattoo artist and vice
president of the organization:
The
Alliance of Professional Tattooists (APT), Inc. is a professional standards
organization that was established in March 1992 and officially incorporated in
June ‘92 as a non-profit organization (contributions, fees and educational
materials are tax deductible.
Their activities:
- Continuing education to artists
- Offers accurate, up-to-date information about communicable diseases
through seminars
- Is interested in preserving tattooing as an artform
- Monitors legislative activity to prevent over-regulation (controlled
or banned)
- Believes in keeping the art of tattooing safe and legal through
education, knowledge and awareness
-
Offers reliable information to
tattoo lovers about safe tattoo practices to ensure your health.
Headquartered in Maryland, its
international membership has expanded from the US to Canada, Europe and other
countries. They are currently establishing state chapters with state directors.
Their
nine-hour seminar entitled, “Preventing Disease Transmission in Tattooing,” is
taught by APT secretary, Dr. Kris Sperry (Fulton County Medical Examiner,
involved with tattooing for over 10 years). Designed in 1988 to educate health
care workers (including tattooists) in the prevention of infection and the
implementation of professional standards,the program was specifically
redesigned in 1991-1992 for the needs of the tattooist and is the standard for
APT members. Since the 1991 Blood- borne Pathogens Rule, APT, Inc. has designed
this manual for tattooists.
PDTT is
presented in various locations throughout the country at a one time fee of
$125.00 (APT members) or $300.00 (non-members). This course is open to the
Professional and Associate levels only. Members are required to complete this
seminar within two years after initial application.
While we
have noted that many individuals are promoting videos on this subject, OSHA
(the US Occupational Safety & Health Association that regulates work-envi-
ronment safety) says that an infection control program cannot be taught by
video, but by an on-site knowledgable individual on site.
OSHA believes that the in-person interaction between instructor and
student is vital to the education of this serious subject, and that individual
questions regarding infection control, universal precautions, disease
transmission, pathology, etc., must be answered by a knowledgeable, credible
instructor such as Dr. Sperry.
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