Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2015
There is increasing concern in the medical community regarding the safe handling and storage of biological materials procured from patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). Neurosurgeons have refused to operate on CJD patients, pathologists have refused to do autopsies on CJD patients, and hospitals have discharged CJD patients without confirmation of their diagnoses. This attitude was exemplified in the case of a director of a pathology laboratory who was so concerned about the safety of his laboratory personnel that he proposed to incinerate his entire collection of CJD slides. This extreme example is typical of the hysteria common among medical colleagues regarding the safe handling of CJD biological materials.