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Environmental Contamination of Contact Precaution and Non-Contact Precaution Patient Rooms in Six Acute Care Facilities

Authors :
Catherine Loc-Carrillo
Lauren Watson
Kristina Stratford
Colleen Macke
Molly Leecaster
Jennifer L. Cadnum
Windy Tanner
Christina P. Bennett
Tyler Wipperfurth
Sreelatha Koganti
Yue Zhang
Judith Noble-Wang
Nasia Safdar
Sujan C Reddy
Matthew H Samore
Emma Ide
Heba Alhmidi
Maria E. Arasim
Curtis J. Donskey
Lindsay Visnovsky
Jeanmarie Mayer
Sarah L. Krein
Patti Roman
Annette L. Jencson
Laura J. Rose
Source :
Clin Infect Dis
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background Environmental contamination is an important source of hospital multidrug-resistant organism (MDRO) transmission. Factors such as patient MDRO contact precautions (CP) status, patient proximity to surfaces, and unit type likely influence MDRO contamination and bacterial bioburden levels on patient room surfaces. Identifying factors associated with environmental contamination in patient rooms and on shared unit surfaces could help identify important environmental MDRO transmission routes. Methods Surfaces were sampled from MDRO CP and non-CP rooms, nursing stations, and mobile equipment in acute care, intensive care, and transplant units within 6 acute care hospitals using a convenience sampling approach blinded to cleaning events. Precaution rooms had patients with clinical or surveillance tests positive for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, vancomycin-resistant enterococci, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae or Acinetobacter within the previous 6 months, or Clostridioides difficile toxin within the past 30 days. Rooms not meeting this definition were considered non-CP rooms. Samples were cultured for the above MDROs and total bioburden. Results Overall, an estimated 13% of rooms were contaminated with at least 1 MDRO. MDROs were detected more frequently in CP rooms (32% of 209 room-sample events) than non-CP rooms (12% of 234 room-sample events). Surface bioburden did not differ significantly between CP and non-CP rooms or MDRO-positive and MDRO-negative rooms. Conclusions CP room surfaces are contaminated more frequently than non-CP room surfaces; however, contamination of non-CP room surfaces is not uncommon and may be an important reservoir for ongoing MDRO transmission. MDRO contamination of non-CP rooms may indicate asymptomatic patient MDRO carriage, inadequate terminal cleaning, or cross-contamination of room surfaces via healthcare personnel hands.

Details

ISSN :
15376591
Volume :
72
Issue :
Suppl 1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7bd6b7826a9ba0bec5943825d06a0f18