Bacterial contamination of hospital bed-control handsets in a surgical setting: a potential marker of contamination of the healthcare environment

被引:26
作者
Brady, R. R. W.
Kalima, P.
Damani, N. N.
Wilson, R. G.
Dunlop, M. G.
机构
[1] Western Gen Hosp, Human Genet Unit, Acad Coloproctol, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, Midlothian, Scotland
[2] Lothian Univ Hosp Div, Dept Med Microbiol, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
[3] Craigavon Area Hosp Grp, Dept Med Microbiol, Lurgan, Scotland
关键词
hospital; surgical; handset; MRSA; infection; bacteria;
D O I
10.1308/003588407X209347
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Introduction Patients undergoing colorectal surgical resections have a high incidence of surgical site infection (SSI). Many patient-specific risk factors have been recognised in association with SSI in such patients, but environmental contamination is increasingly recognised as a contributor to hospital-acquired infection (HIA). This study set out to describe the bacterial contamination of the patient environment, using hospital bed-control handsets, as they are frequently handled by both staff and patients and represent a marker of environmental contamination, Patients and methods On two unannounced sampling events, 1 week apart, 140 bacteriological assessments were made of 70 hospital bed control handsets within a specialist colorectal surgical unit. Results Of the handsets examined, 67 (95.7%) demonstrated at least one bacterial species (52.9% grew 1, 30% grew 2 and 12.9% grew 3 or more bacterial species). Of these, 29 (41.4%) bed control handsets grew bacteria known to cause nosocomial infection, including 22 (31.4%) handsets which grew Enterococcus spp., 9 (12.9%) which grew MRSA, 2 (2.9%) which grew MSSA, 2 (2.9%) which grew coliforms, and 1 (1.4%) handset which grew anaerobes. At 1-week follow-up, 31 bed-control handsets showed evidence of contamination by the same bacterial species. Conclusions This study revealed high levels of bacteria known to cause HAI, contaminating hospital bed-control handsets in a surgical setting. Further study is now required to confirm whether hospital environmental contamination is causally involved in SSI.
引用
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页码:656 / 660
页数:5
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