Subject: Inoculations
I was told many years ago that tetanus vaccination and subsequent booster shots every ten years were necessary for museum staff handling museum objects and works of art. I understood that the organism that causes tetanus is associated with horse manure and that any work of art which at one time had been in an environment where dried horse manure could have blow onto it as airborne dust had the potential to transfer the disease if, for example, you received a small cut from a tack on the edge of a painting. This would mean any item pre-motor car or that had ever been in a farm or rural environment. This would cover most of the pre-1900 material in our collections. I have fairly well demanded that new staff get a tetanus shot and tried to keep up with other staff to make sure their boosters are current. However, a colleague has suffered very badly from an inoculation for another disease which went horribly wrong and this has made me re evaluate things. Also, while working in museums for a quite a long time, I have never heard of anyone actually contracting tetanus. I have asked our Health and Safety Committee to contact our public health officials for their advice, but would also appreciate museum community feedback. Has anyone looked into this recently? Does anyone have a museum or art gallery policy on inoculations of staff for tetanus and/or other diseases? Thomas Dixon Chief Conservator National Gallery of Victoria Melbourne Australia Fax: +61-3-9208 0249 *** Conservation DistList Instance 11:68 Distributed: Monday, February 9, 1998 Message Id: cdl-11-68-008 ***Received on Monday, 9 February, 1998