1. Sustainable reduction of nasal colonization and hand contamination withStaphylococcus aureusin food handlers, 2002–2011
- Author
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Jeffery Ho, Margaret May O'Donoghue, and Maureen V. Boost
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Veterinary medicine ,Food handlers ,Food Handling ,Epidemiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome ,medicine.disease_cause ,Disease Outbreaks ,Hygiene ,medicine ,Humans ,Hand Hygiene ,Colonization ,Longitudinal Studies ,Respiratory system ,Skin ,media_common ,business.industry ,Outbreak ,Interrupted Time Series Analysis ,Contamination ,Hand ,Original Papers ,Surgery ,Infectious Diseases ,Carriage ,Carrier State ,Hong Kong ,Female ,Nasal Cavity ,business - Abstract
SUMMARYA longitudinal study of nasal colonization and hand contamination of food handlers withStaphylococcus aureuscommenced in 2002 prior to the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome. In the follow-up in 2003 when hygiene measures were strictly implemented, significant reductions in carriage were observed. To investigate if this change was sustained, nasal and hand carriage rates were compared between the earlier studies and a further sampling in 2011. The initial nasal carriage rate was 35% and hand contamination 41·2%, decreasing to 23·5% and 11·6%, respectively in 2003 (P< 0·001). In 2011, nasal carriage was similar to 2003 (22·9%), while hand contamination dropped further to 3·7% (P< 0·001).Spa-typing revealed 39 types in 2002 and 42 in 2011. This study reveals that the marked reduction in colonization had been sustained. This may be attributed to reduced opportunities for spread due to enhanced hygiene and reinforces its importance for control of disease.
- Published
- 2014
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