|
Permanent tattooing
of any form carries inherent risks, including infection and disease.
Germs,
they’re everywhere…
If you are of a squeamish disposition I suggest that you skip this
first part, OK… still here? Good.
Bacteria,
viruses, mold spores and protozoa including but not limited to-
Influenza, Pneumonia, Streptococcus, Escherichia Coli,
HepatitisA,B,C,D,E,F and G, Staphylococcus, HIV and Tuberculosis
(I’ll use the blanket term-germs) are all around us, indeed
all over us. Regardless of how clean you think you are you will
never be free of those tiny organisms; we need hundreds of
individual kinds in order to survive in this filthy world from those
that live in your eyelash follicles to those in your intestine. You
can scrub and scrub but it’ll do no good.
I’m reminded of an Outer Limits or Twilight Zone movie scene, I
don’t recall which, where the antagonist is a “clean-freak”, lives
in a white, sealed apartment and wears gloves and a mask and is
constantly cleaning, he sees a cockroach, tries to kill it, does so
and then….thousands of roaches swarm into the sealed room through
every drain, air vent and electrical outlet. Great scene; “but what
does that have to do with tattooing?” I hear you ask. Well our
lives are a bit like that, of course on a much, much smaller scale.
They are all around, on surfaces and airborne, Consider the fact
that one sneeze can project 100,000 droplets of mucus a distance of
up to 10 meters at a speed of 99 miles per hour and if that sneeze
contains any germs, (it does) they’ll be spread too, let alone the
amount of possible nastiness carried in our blood. At a microscopic
level we are being swarmed by germs, the vast majority are harmless;
however some may even be fatal.
As living
organisms they do adapt and evolve with their environmental
conditions, the continued use of low dose disinfectants may in fact
increase their resistance to these chemicals and produce stronger
strains so correct sanitation and infection prevention is vital to a
safe(er) and healthy environment. The tattoo studio is no exception.
Tattooing
saves the day, again…
The study of
cross-contamination (the spread of germs from one place to another
by human interaction) was first discovered through a survey of
tattooing. Yes, one more invaluable contribution that the tattooing
culture has passed on into global knowledge.
In 1861 Ernest Berchon, a French Naval surgeon, published a paper on
the medical complications of tattooing noting that the spread of
syphilis was observed from one soldier to another, the later being a
virgin and the tattooer was seen to spit into the drying pigment,
several times, during the tattoo process. Berchon guessed that the
organic matter contaminating the needles or pigment was responsible
for the resulting infection and he wasn’t far from the truth.
This was a revelation in medical circles because microorganisms were
not known to cause infection at that time.
Surgeons did
not wash hands or wear gloves and went from one patient to the other
with contaminated clothing and skin spreading whatever disease was
living in the fluids. Infection, as we know it, was considered a
normal and healthy part of the healing process, pus and mucus
secretions were seen as manifestations of the disease being expelled
from the body. Excuse me while I pause to shudder……..thank you.

As a result of
these findings the medical field cleaned up its act, literally, and
the cases of serious infections, blood poisoning, gangrene and death
were reduced in hospitals and clinics across the world. The sheer
number of people tattooed under such conditions and the lack of
reported infections lead me to believe that either infection was not
common for those getting tattooed or that no one noticed or cared.
The later is more feasible.
Tattooing
studios were very much of the bucket and sponge mentality for many
years after that in fact up until the 1970s some “modern” studios
still used one bucket and one sponge to wipe down all customers,
when the water/sludge solution evaporated or spilled across the
floor you just topped it up and on you went (shudders again…).

Thankfully those days are
long gone. There are many processes put into action to ensure that
cross-contamination is minimized in a modern tattoo studio. I say
minimized because no one can foresee all possible situations and
conditions however the data is good.
Hepatitis and HIV/Aids.
The two big ones, the two
diseases we have all read about and know that historically at least
one has been linked to tattooing. The Coney Island outbreak of
Hepatitis in 1961 shut down tattooing in New York City and many
State and local municipalities followed suit. It’s still illegal in
Oklahoma largely because of the 1961 rulings.
The Center for Disease Control
reports that of
the 13,387 annual cases of HCV detailed in the most recent CDC
report, 12 are associated with tattoo studios. By comparison, 43
cases -- or better than 300% more -- are associated with dental
offices. This shows how we are at risk of infection in many areas of
our everyday lives.
The official CDC statement is as follows:
"No data exist in the
United States indicating that persons with exposures to tattooing
alone are at increased risk for Hepatitis C infection."
The CDC categorizes
tattooists as "personal service workers" along with hairdressers,
barbers, manicurists, acupuncturists, and massage therapists. Since
the early 1980s, this category of workers has received intense
scrutiny in ongoing CDC investigations of how the HIV virus that
causes AIDS is spread. In its HIV/AIDS Surveillance Reports, the CDC
has consistently noted that it has documented "no cases of HIV
transmission through tattooing" anywhere in the USA since it began
tracking such data in 1985.
No documental basis exists to support
public perception that the process of contemporary commercial
tattooing is unreasonably disease-prone rather it is the
result of the demonizing of the tattoo culture by agenda driven
political and religious groups that has kept this general idea alive
for a few thousand years. Alright already I’ll put the soap box
away.
Infection from tattooing
in a clean and modern tattoo studio is rare.
Potential infections
include everything from surface infections of the skin to
Staphylococcus infections that can cause cardiological damage.

Universal Precautions,
Standard Precaution and Clean vs. Sterile.
George Burchett, Sailor
Jerry and Lyle Tuttle are some of the names that come to mind when
thinking of the old school tattooist that influenced the business;
they also were all proponents of a safe working environment for both
themselves and their customers. Single use products, use them once
then throw them away, such as needles, ink caps for individual
measurements of pigments, paper towels for wiping down etc. have
greatly reduced cross-contamination in the studio. The use of
aftercare sheets further expands the education of the customer as to
the correct way to tend for their tattoos once they step out of the
studio and remember that the healing period of a fresh tattoo is
many hundred times longer than the application time and the site is
more prone to infection in the uncontrolled environment outside of
the tattoo studio.
The Laboratory Centre for
Disease Control, Health Canada and the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control developed the strategy of "Universal Precautions" in 1983 to
prevent occupational contact with patient blood and body fluids.
“Standard Precautions”, as defined by the Center for Disease Control
in 1996, stress that all customers should be assumed to be
infectious for blood-borne diseases such as AIDS and hepatitis B/C.
These strategies include:
Personal Protective
Equipment (PPE)
- PPE includes gloves, face masks etc.
Engineering Controls - Engineering controls refer
to methods of isolating or removing hazards from the workplace.
Examples of engineering controls include: sharps disposal
containers, biohazard containers for wipes and disposable plastic
barriers on power supply cords and water/spray bottles etc.
Work Practice Controls - Refers to practical
techniques that reduce the likelihood of exposure by changing the
way a task is performed. Examples of activities requiring specific
attention to work practice controls include: training requirements,
housekeeping, hand washing, careful handling of used needles and
other sharps and frequent changing of gloves.
If your tattoo artist
reaches for something that does not have a plastic barrier film
specifically put on it for your session alone, he/she has
contaminated that ink bottle/clip-cord/tattoo machine/telephone/door
handle/dancing bear etc.
In order for an infection to occur four conditions must exist:
1.
The infectious agent must be present i.e. a virus
2.
The entry site for infection must present i.e. a cut
or needle stick
3.
The mean of transmission must be present i.e. a
contaminated object/surface contacting the entry site
4.
The conditions for infection must be present i.e.
sufficient infectious agent
Without all of the
above, infection will not happen. Standard Precautions will stop
one, two or all of these conditions.
The simple act of washing your hands, for at least twenty seconds
under hot water with soap, will reduce the level of infectious
agents by almost 95%.
PPE and barrier films (i.e. a plastic bag covering the tattoo
machine) are considered clean, not sterile, that is to say they are
new and fresh but have not been subjected to the processes needed to
kill bacteria, fungi and viruses. This is where the Autoclave comes
in.
The Vacuum Steam
Autoclave is pretty much industry standard and mandated by law in
most jurisdictions. It uses a combination of heat (250-270F) and
several times atmospheric pressure (15-30 psi) to kill anything
living on the instruments/equipment being sterilized: needles, tubes
etc. It is possible for an instrument to be sterile but not clean.
If proper pre-sterilization procedures have not been followed
such as meticulous scrubbing, the casings and exoskeletons of
organisms will remain, pigment particles from previous usage and
residual fluids may be present. The autoclave process will kill
anything living but does not remove these contaminate. In some cases
a “bio-film” can build up overtime and actually protect organisms
underneath it from the effects of an autoclave leaving them active
and with the potential to infect.
Heat sterilization and
chemical processes exist which also kill germs and remove
contaminates but these methods come with additional dangers like
chemical storage and fire hazard. Steam sterilization is used by
hospitals and dentists and seems to be a very friendly, easy to
monitor method for the tattoo studio. Autoclaves should be tested on
a regular basis to determine the operational status of the machine.
Hard surface cleaners are also used to reduce the possibility of
contamination and all surfaces should be cleaned between clients.
Stencil application should not be done with a common surface such as
a direct application of deodorant which could be exposed to shaving
cuts from previous clients and can build up a colony of bacteria
between tattooing sessions.
So look for the “set up”,
drop-cloth, ink caps, needles, lubrication lotions and tubes etc. to
come out of sterile packages, one time use only and disposed of
after the tattoo. Personally, I set up my equipment in front of the
client so they have the opportunity to see the process and ask any
questions about what and why I’m doing what I do.

Environmental influences
Ultra-sonic
cleaners are used in the tattoo industry for different tasks; this
machine uses ultra high frequency sound waves in combination with a
micro-particle cleanser to dislodge particles and debris from hard
surfaces prior to scrubbing and sterilizing and some use them to
clean the tubes and tips between colors, they also should be
covered therefore preventing any over-spray into the surrounding air
which can settle on unprotected surfaces of pigment bottles,
clothing and seating.
Food in a tattooing area is also a no-no; even when cleaned up small
pieces can remain and encourage further growth of germs. Pets should
not be in a studio environment for the obvious reasons.
An open door or window to the outside world is not going increase
your chance of infection.

From the use of
sterilization equipment to the use of plastic coverings on wash
bottles, proper hand washing, frequent glove changing and clean
working habits, aftercare sheets and proper covering for fresh
tattoos, all go towards ensuring that the client has a safe and
pleasant experience in the studio. We as tattooists should think of
it as ensuring that we will be alive to continue tattooing for many
more years to come. We value our health and that of our clients;
they put a huge amount of trust into the artist to make them a piece
that’ll last them a lifetime and when they refer a friend in ten,
twenty or thirty year’s time we will be ready to receive them and
give them the attention they deserve in a suitable environment.
Respect is the bottom
line; does the artist respect his/her own wellbeing and that of the
customer? If the answer is yes then all possible precautions are
taken and all will be well in the world, if the answer is no then
walk away and find another place, another artist who does respect
you and your tattoo.
Paul Roe
Tattoo Artist
Washington DC
|