Consensus statement: patient safety, healthcare-associated infections and hospital environmental surfaces

Author:

Roques Christine1,Al Mousa Haifaa2,Duse Adriano3,Gallagher Rose4,Koburger Torsten5,Lingaas Egil6,Petrosillo Nicola7,Škrlin Jasenka8

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory on Bacterial Adhesion & Biofilm Formation, University Paul Sabatier, UMR 5503 – Hospital practitioner at the Federative Institute of Biology, Purpan Hospital – Toulouse, France

2. Infection Control Association, Infection Control Directorate, Sabah Health Area, PO Box 12414, Al-Shamiya, Kuwait

3. Department of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases, National Health Laboratory Service & Wits School of Pathology, Houghton, Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa

4. Infection Prevention & Control, Royal College of Nursing, London, UK

5. Hygiene Nord GmbH, Griefswald, Germany

6. Department of Infection Prevention, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway

7. Infectious Diseases Division, National Institute for Infectious Diseases, ‘Lazzaro Spallanzani’, Rome, Italy

8. Center for Clinical Microbiology & Hospital Infections, University Hospital Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia

Abstract

Healthcare-associated infections have serious implications for both patients and hospitals. Environmental surface contamination is the key to transmission of nosocomial pathogens. Routine manual cleaning and disinfection eliminates visible soil and reduces environmental bioburden and risk of transmission, but may not address some surface contamination. Automated area decontamination technologies achieve more consistent and pervasive disinfection than manual methods, but it is challenging to demonstrate their efficacy within a randomized trial of the multiple interventions required to reduce healthcare-associated infection rates. Until data from multicenter observational studies are available, automated area decontamination technologies should be an adjunct to manual cleaning and disinfection within a total, multi-layered system and risk-based approach designed to control environmental pathogens and promote patient safety.

Publisher

Future Medicine Ltd

Subject

Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

Reference23 articles.

1. Human error: models and management

2. Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Healthcare-associated infections. http://www.ihi.org/explore/hai/pages/default.aspx.

3. World Health Organization. Clean care is safer care. www.who.int/gpsc/en/.

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