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Assessment of the Overall and Multidrug-Resistant Organism Bioburden on Environmental Surfaces in Healthcare Facilities

Authors :
Judith Noble-Wang
Jonathan R. Edwards
Alicia M. Shams
Anthony D. Harris
Salvatore Cali
Anna LaFae
L. Clifford McDonald
Jesse T. Jacob
Lisa Pineles
Kerri A. Thom
Matthew J. Arduino
Laura J. Rose
Source :
Infection control and hospital epidemiology. 37(12)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

OBJECTIVETo determine the typical microbial bioburden (overall bacterial and multidrug-resistant organisms [MDROs]) on high-touch healthcare environmental surfaces after routine or terminal cleaning.DESIGNProspective 2.5-year microbiological survey of large surface areas (>1,000 cm2).SETTINGMDRO contact-precaution rooms from 9 acute-care hospitals and 2 long-term care facilities in 4 states.PARTICIPANTSSamples from 166 rooms (113 routine cleaned and 53 terminal cleaned rooms).METHODSUsing a standard sponge-wipe sampling protocol, 2 composite samples were collected from each room; a third sample was collected from eachClostridium difficileroom. Composite 1 included the TV remote, telephone, call button, and bed rails. Composite 2 included the room door handle, IV pole, and overbed table. Composite 3 included toileting surfaces. Total bacteria and MDROs (ie, methicillin-resistantStaphylococcus aureus, vancomycin-resistant enterococci [VRE],Acinetobacter baumannii,Klebsiella pneumoniae, andC. difficile) were quantified, confirmed, and tested for drug resistance.RESULTSThe mean microbial bioburden and range from routine cleaned room composites were higher (2,700 colony-forming units [CFU]/100 cm2; ≤1–130,000 CFU/100 cm2) than from terminal cleaned room composites (353 CFU/100 cm2; ≤1–4,300 CFU/100 cm2). MDROs were recovered from 34% of routine cleaned room composites (range ≤1–13,000 CFU/100 cm2) and 17% of terminal cleaned room composites (≤1–524 CFU/100 cm2). MDROs were recovered from 40% of rooms; VRE was the most common (19%).CONCLUSIONSThis multicenter bioburden summary provides a first step to determining microbial bioburden on healthcare surfaces, which may help provide a basis for developing standards to evaluate cleaning and disinfection as well as a framework for studies using an evidentiary hierarchy for environmental infection control.Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol2016;1426–1432

Details

ISSN :
15596834 and 0899823X
Volume :
37
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Infection control and hospital epidemiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....968e1ee08b74efc57b72066c3bd05938