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Cleaning protocol may reduce C diff., MRSA transmission

Monday September 17, 2012
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Daily cleaning of high-touch surfaces in isolation rooms of patients with Clostridium difficile or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus significantly reduces the rate of the pathogens on the hands of healthcare personnel, according to a study.

The study’s researchers said the findings underscore the importance of environmental cleaning for reducing the spread of hard-to-treat infections.

Researchers with the Cleveland Veterans Affairs Medical Center conducted a prospective, randomized trial comparing regular cleaning protocols of housekeeping staff with daily disinfection of high-touch surfaces (bed rail and bedside tables, call button and phone, and toilet seat and bathroom hand rail) performed by researchers in 34 C. difficile and 36 MRSA isolation rooms. The study assessed hand contamination of physicians, nurses and research staff six to eight hours after disinfection procedures.

In rooms with daily disinfection, the researchers found significant reductions in the amount and frequency of pathogens on the hands of investigators and healthcare personnel caring for the patients. The infection rate was 6.4% with daily disinfection versus 30% with standard cleaning.

"These findings add to the growing body of evidence supporting environmental cleaning and disinfection as an important infection control strategy," Sirisha Kundrapu, MD, the study’s lead author, said in a news release. "The intervention was simple, inexpensive and well-accepted by patients and staff."

Regular cleaning protocols of housekeeping staff include disinfection of patient rooms with sodium hypochlorite after discharge, daily cleaning of bathrooms and floors and cleaning of high-touch surfaces only if visibly soiled. During the study period, less than 10% of high-touch surfaces in C. difficile or MRSA rooms were cleaned daily using regular protocols, the researchers reported.

Rooms randomized to daily disinfection were cleaned each morning for seven days, or until discharge. The daily disinfection took about 20 minutes per room.

The study highlights the potential impact of small changes in environmental cleaning on preventing transmission and patient exposure to harmful pathogens, but has several limitations, the researchers said.

Limitations include that the daily disinfection was performed by research staff rather than by housekeeping staff of the medical center, and that researchers did not measure adherence to hand hygiene and contact precautions for the healthcare workers whose hands were cultured and did not attempt to assess whether healthcare worker hand contamination was due to noncompliance with glove use or lack of proper technique when removing gloves. Also, molecular typing was not performed to determine whether hand isolates matched environmental isolates.

The study appears in the October issue of Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, the journal of the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America.


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