
Urgent steps to take immediately after an accidental needle prick
15 Aug 2025 12:24pm
Photo for illustrative purposes only. Photo: Canva.
WONDERING what to do if you accidentally sustain a needle-stick injury?
Medical professionals share vital guidance on how swift, correct action can reduce the risk of infection and serious complications.
For parents, teachers and community members, knowing the right response can make all the difference in an emergency.
Here are seven essential steps to follow if you or someone you know experiences a needle-stick injury:
1. Stay Calm and Act Fast
Panic can delay the necessary steps. Keeping a clear head ensures you respond quickly and correctly, which is crucial in preventing infections.
2. Do Not Squeeze or Suck the Wound
Avoid pressing or sucking the injury site. This can push harmful germs deeper into the bloodstream, increasing the risk of infection.
3. Wash Thoroughly with Soap and Water
Rinse the wound immediately with clean, running water and mild soap to remove as many pathogens as possible. Photo for illustrative purposes only. Photo: Canva.
4. Apply Gentle Pressure to Stop Bleeding
Once cleaned, press the area lightly with a clean cloth or sterile gauze to stem bleeding.
Do not use harsh chemicals such as concentrated alcohol directly on the wound, as this may cause irritation.
5. Seek Medical Attention Without Delay
If the needle's source is unknown or if there's a possibility it was used by someone with a high-risk condition like HIV or hepatitis, get medical help right away. A doctor may recommend blood tests and preventive treatments.
6. Ask About Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP)
Some clinics offer PEP which is a short course of antiretroviral drugs that can significantly reduce the risk of contracting HIV if taken within one to two hours of exposure, and no later than 72 hours.
7. Monitor for Warning Signs
Stay alert for symptoms such as swelling, redness, or fever. These could indicate infection and require immediate medical evaluation.
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Urgent steps to take immediately after an accidental needle prick
Knowing the right response can make all the difference in an emergency. By NURSYAHMINA ZAINAL 15 Aug 2025 12:24pm Photo for illustrative purposes only. Photo: Canva. WONDERING what to do if you accidentally sustain a needle-stick injury? Medical professionals share vital guidance on how swift, correct action can reduce the risk of infection and serious complications. For parents, teachers and community members, knowing the right response can make all the difference in an emergency. Here are seven essential steps to follow if you or someone you know experiences a needle-stick injury: 1. Stay Calm and Act Fast Panic can delay the necessary steps. Keeping a clear head ensures you respond quickly and correctly, which is crucial in preventing infections. 2. Do Not Squeeze or Suck the Wound Avoid pressing or sucking the injury site. This can push harmful germs deeper into the bloodstream, increasing the risk of infection. 3. Wash Thoroughly with Soap and Water Rinse the wound immediately with clean, running water and mild soap to remove as many pathogens as possible. Photo for illustrative purposes only. Photo: Canva. 4. Apply Gentle Pressure to Stop Bleeding Once cleaned, press the area lightly with a clean cloth or sterile gauze to stem bleeding. Do not use harsh chemicals such as concentrated alcohol directly on the wound, as this may cause irritation. 5. Seek Medical Attention Without Delay If the needle's source is unknown or if there's a possibility it was used by someone with a high-risk condition like HIV or hepatitis, get medical help right away. A doctor may recommend blood tests and preventive treatments. 6. Ask About Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP) Some clinics offer PEP which is a short course of antiretroviral drugs that can significantly reduce the risk of contracting HIV if taken within one to two hours of exposure, and no later than 72 hours. 7. Monitor for Warning Signs Stay alert for symptoms such as swelling, redness, or fever. These could indicate infection and require immediate medical evaluation. More Like This


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As if by not talking about sex, we can somehow make it disappear. That could not be further from the truth. What's actually happening is that young people are being left to learn about sex from half-whispered conversations, the Internet, and sometimes, from experience too late. A study conducted in Kelantan found that 64% of adolescents surveyed relied on their peers as their primary source of sexual health information. Meanwhile, official education is fragmented and uneven. A comprehensive review found that sex education is inconsistently delivered, abstinence-focused, and lacking teacher support. Even clinic outreach reflects this stigma. In interviews with school health teams conducted in 2022, many admitted to emphasising moral warnings and fear-based messaging over clear, accurate, and accessible information about sexual health. The consequences of choosing to treat sex as taboo instead of teaching young people how to navigate it safely and responsibly are already here. Nowadays, even teenagers are contracting HIV through sexual transmission. Others face unwanted pregnancies, unsafe abortions, and emotional trauma from relationships where consent was never properly understood. For LGBTQ+ youth, the stakes are even higher. Many already face social stigma at home and in school. Without inclusive sexual health education, they are further isolated, left to navigate misinformation and shame with no formal support. All evidence points to the need for comprehensive sex education. As United Nations agency Unicef Malaysia explains, it helps young people understand their bodies, feelings, and relationships in a healthy and informed way. This includes learning about puberty, sexual and reproductive health, and how to protect themselves from unplanned pregnancy, STIs, and abuse. Beyond biology, it equips students with the tools to navigate intimacy with safety, confidence, and respect. Comprehensive sex education also teaches young people how to set boundaries, say no when something feels wrong, and respect the choices of others. Crucially, it removes the shame often tied to these topics. When students are given space to ask questions and speak openly, they grow up more confident, better informed, and more capable of making decisions that protect their health and wellbeing. In Malaysia today, access to sex education is inconsistent. Some students might receive it in schools, depending on how comfortable with it their teachers are. Others might encounter it through workshops by NGOs or youth groups. But many go without entirely. There is an urgency here to embed it in the curriculum and deliver it consistently. It is also possible to adapt sex education to local values. In Tunisia, a Muslim-majority country, the government introduced age-appropriate lessons in 2019 with support from religious leaders and civil society. The curriculum focuses on health, respect, and dignity, proving that sensitive topics can be addressed without compromising cultural or religious beliefs. Much of the work today in Malaysia falls on NGOs, youth-led groups, and individual educators. However, the reach of such methods is limited, and they cannot replace a national policy that commits to protecting every child, in every classroom. More broadly, sex education helps us replace judgement with understanding. The comments on social media left underneath the aforementioned news have been painful, almost unbearable, to read. They speak deeply of a society that has never been taught how to understand difference, how to speak about vulnerability, or how to treat others with basic compassion. We see the impact of stigma in how certain groups are treated: LGBTQ+ people are vilified for seeking HIV care, teenage girls are shamed for getting pregnant, and abuse survivors are blamed instead of supported. Compre-hensive sex education helps break these patterns. It teaches that consent is care, that all bodies and identities deserve respect, and that honest conversations lead to safer, healthier lives. We cannot keep dismissing education efforts while ignoring the deeper crisis unfolding in silence. The rising HIV numbers, the public shaming, and harmful assumptions are symptoms of a society that has refused, for too long, to speak honestly about sex, safety, and dignity. If we truly want to protect our youth, then the conversation must begin now, and it must begin with courage. Student Jonathan Lee traces his writing roots to The Star's BRATs programme. He is now a Malaysian youth advocate. The views expressed here are solely the writer's own.