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The Benefits of Surface Disinfection

Learn about the importance of surface disinfection in preventing healthcare-associated infections. This article provides an introduction to disinfection principles, reviews the contribution of noncritical surfaces to disease transmission, and offers recommendations for surface disinfection.

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The Benefits of Surface Disinfection

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  1. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection William A. Rutala, Ph.D., M.P.H. UNC Health Care System and UNC School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC

  2. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Introduction and principles of disinfection • Review the contribution of the noncritical environment to disease transmission • Justify the use of a disinfectant on noncritical surfaces • Provide recommendations for surface disinfection

  3. Disinfection • Introduction • Effective use of disinfectants constitutes an important factor in preventing healthcare-associated infections • Spaulding proposed three categories of germicidal action to prevent a risk of infection associated with the use of equipment or surfaces • Three categories: critical; semicritical; noncritical • Surfaces considered noncritical (contact intact skin) • Use of noncritical items or contact with noncritical surfaces carries a low risk of transmitting a pathogen to patients

  4. Surface Disinfection • Noncritical Surfaces • Medical equipment surfaces (BP cuff, stethoscopes) • May frequently become contaminated with patient material • Repeatedly touched by health care personnel • Disinfectant may be used • Housekeeping surfaces (bed rails, bedside tables) • May play a theoretical but less significant role in diseases transmission • Disinfectants or detergents may be used

  5. Low Level Disinfection for “Noncritical” Objects Exposure time >60 sec GermicideUse Concentration Ethyl or isopropyl alcohol 70-90% Chlorine 100ppm (1:500 dilution) Phenolic UD Iodophor UD Quaternary ammonium UD _____________________________________ UD=Manufacturer’s recommended use dilution

  6. Surface Disinfection • Introduction (continued) • Use of noncritical items or contact with noncritical surfaces carries little risk of transmitting pathogens to patients • Thus, the routine use of disinfectants to disinfect housekeeping surfaces (e.g., bedside tables, bed rails) is controversial • However, while noncritical surfaces have not been directly implicated in disease transmission, they may potentially contribute to cross-transmission by acquisition of transient hand carriage by HCW due to contact with a contaminated surface, or patient contact with contaminated surfaces or medical equipment

  7. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Justification for Using a Disinfectant • Surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE, MRSA, C. difficile) • Needed for surfaces contaminated by blood and OPIM • Disinfectants are more effective in reducing microbial load • Detergents become contaminated and result in seeding the patients environment with bacteria • CDC recommends disinfection of noncritical equipment and surfaces for patients on isolation precautions • One product for decontamination of noncritical surfaces (that is, floors and equipment)

  8. Surfaces May Contribute to Transmission Pathogens implicated in transmission via contaminated noncritical surfaces • Bacteria • Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas, Clostridium difficile • Oxacillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus • Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus spp. • Viruses • SARS • Rotavirus • Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)

  9. Surfaces May Contribute to Transmission • Why do we believe that surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE)? • Does VRE survive in the environment? • Are surfaces near infected/colonized patients contaminated and does surface contamination play a role in patient-to-patient transmission? • Are there trials demonstrating reduced transmission with disinfection?

  10. Surfaces May Contribute to TransmissionVRE ENVIRONMENTAL SURVIVAL Enterococcus • Countertops: E. faecalis = 5 d, E. faecium = 7 d • Bedrails = 24 hours • Telephone handpieces = 60 minutes • Stethoscopes = 30 minutes • Gloved and ungloved fingers >60 minutes Noskin G, et al. ICHE 1995;16:577-581.

  11. Surfaces May Contribute to Transmission • Why do we believe that surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE)? • Does VRE survive in the environment? • Are surfaces near infected/colonized patients contaminated and does surface contamination play a role in patient-to-patient transmission? • Are there trials demonstrating reduced transmission with disinfection?

  12. Surfaces May Contribute to TransmissionVRE ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION

  13. Surfaces May Contribute to Transmission • Why do we believe that surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE)? • Does VRE survive in the environment? • Are surfaces near infected/colonized patients contaminated and does surface contamination play a role in patient-to-patient transmission? • Do antibiotic-resistant organisms (e.g., VRE) develop cross-resistance to commonly used environmental disinfectants or antiseptics? • Are there trials demonstrating reduced transmission with disinfection?

  14. Surfaces May Contribute to TransmissionSurfaces in the Spread of Infections • In experimental settings, treatment of surfaces with germicide has been found to interrupt transmission • Prevention of surface-to-human rotavirus transmission by treatment with disinfectant spray (J Clin Microbiol 1991;29:1991) • Interrupts transfer of rhinovirus from environmental surfaces to hands (Appl Environ Microbiol 1993;59:1579) • Studies demonstrating reduced transmission with improved disinfection • Aggressive environmental control program credited with eradicating VRE from a burn unit and Acinetobacter from a neurosurgical ICU • Reduction in C. difficile-associated diarrhea rates in the BMTU (8.6 to 3.3) during the period of bleach disinfection (1:10)

  15. Surfaces May Contribute to TransmissionCONCLUSIONS • Widespread surface contamination may occur with some pathogens (e.g. VRE) and hands may become transiently colonized from contact with surfaces • Noncritical surfaces may play a role in the transmission of some pathogens (e.g., VRE, C.difficile) • Meticulous disinfection and handwashing will prevent transmission

  16. Impact of Surface Disinfection on HAIs • Dharan et al, 1999 • No change in incidence of HAIs during 4 mo trial compared to preceding 12 mo; but detergents associated with increase in bacterial counts. • Danforth et al, 1987 • NI rate did not differ between disinfectant (8.0/100 patients) and detergent (7.1/100 patients); 8 acute care units; 3 mo periods; phenol. • Daschner et al, 1980 • No difference in NI rate in ICU over 6 mo (15.6% vs 15.5%). Comment: Studies are small, short duration and suffer from low statistical power since the outcome (HAI) is one of low frequency (not detect small decrease-0.1%, 1750 HAIs). Requirement for reducing HAI stringent, not met by most infection control interventions.

  17. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Justification for Using a Disinfectant • Surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE, MRSA, C. difficile) • Needed for surfaces contaminated by blood and OPIM • Disinfectants are more effective in reducing microbial load • Detergents become contaminated and result in seeding the patients environment with bacteria • CDC recommends disinfection of noncritical equipment and surfaces for patients on isolation precautions • One product for decontamination of noncritical surfaces (that is, floors and equipment)

  18. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Needed for surfaces contaminated by blood and OPIM • In the US, to comply with OSHA rule on bloodborne pathogens, a blood spill must be cleaned using a disinfectant • The compliance directive states that the blood should be disinfected using an EPA-registered disinfectant, a disnfectant with a HBV/HIV claim, or a solution of bleach between 1:10 and 1:100 with water.

  19. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Justification for Using a Disinfectant • Surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE, MRSA, C. difficile) • Needed for surfaces contaminated by blood and OPIM • Disinfectants are more effective in reducing microbial load • Detergents become contaminated and result in seeding the patients environment with bacteria • CDC recommends disinfection of noncritical equipment and surfaces for patients on isolation precautions • One product for decontamination of noncritical surfaces (that is, floors and equipment)

  20. Cleaning and Disinfection of Floors

  21. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Justification for Using a Disinfectant • Surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE, MRSA, C. difficile) • Needed for surfaces contaminated by blood and OPIM • Disinfectants are more effective in reducing microbial load • Detergents become contaminated and result in seeding the patients environment with bacteria • CDC recommends disinfection of noncritical equipment and surfaces for patients on isolation precautions • One product for decontamination of noncritical surfaces (that is, floors and equipment)

  22. Microbial Contamination of Mop Water

  23. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Justification for Using a Disinfectant • Surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE, MRSA, C. difficile) • Needed for surfaces contaminated by blood and OPIM • Disinfectants are more effective in reducing microbial load • Detergents become contaminated and result in seeding the patients environment with bacteria • Dharan found use of detergents alone on floors and furniture led to an increase in contamination in patients environmental surfaces after cleaning (average increase 103.6cfu/24cm2)

  24. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Justification for Using a Disinfectant • Surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE, MRSA, C. difficile) • Needed for surfaces contaminated by blood and OPIM • Disinfectants are more effective in reducing microbial load • Detergents become contaminated and result in seeding the patients environment with bacteria • CDC recommends disinfection of noncritical equipment and housekeeping surfaces for patients on isolation precautions (eg, MRSA) • One product for decontamination of noncritical surfaces (that is, floors and equipment)

  25. Recommendations for Surface DisinfectionEurope • Dettenkofer, Merkel, Mutter, Daschner – 2004 • Recommended that the MRSA patient room be disinfected 3 times per day on intensive care units and once per day on normal wards • But given the high prevalence of MRSA among hospitalized patients in many countries and routine screening is rarely conducted, shouldn’t we employ disinfectants for all hospitalized patients as unspecified colonization is a routine occurrence?

  26. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Justification for Using a Disinfectant • Surfaces may contribute to transmission of epidemiologically important microbes (e.g., VRE, MRSA, C. difficile) • Needed for surfaces contaminated by blood and OPIM • Disinfectants are more effective in reducing microbial load • Detergents become contaminated and result in seeding the patients environment with bacteria • CDC recommends disinfection of noncritical equipment and surfaces for patients on isolation precautions • One product for decontamination of noncritical surfaces (that is, noncritical housekeeping and equipment, isolation, blood)

  27. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Reasonable to use hospital disinfectants on noncritical patient equipment surfaces (e.g., blood pressure cuffs, stethoscopes, radiograph machines), and housekeeping surfaces (e.g., bedside tables and bed rails).

  28. Recommendations for Surface DisinfectionEurope • Robert Koch Institute, Germany • Tasked to produce guidelines by a federal infection protection law • Recommends the use of surface disinfectants for patient equipment surfaces and noncritical housekeeping surfaces in patient care areas. • French Authorities • Recommends using disinfectants for surface disinfection in patient care areas

  29. Surface DisinfectionConcerns? • Allergy-Literature review (Medline) from 1966 to April 2004, provided no evidence that suggests the use of LLD results in allergic symptoms in health care workers. “BAC is one of the leading allergens affecting HCP” discussed Quat use as a risk factor for allergies in pig farmers. • Environment-Adverse effects on human health, due to the disposal of LLD into soil/rivers/streams, have not been proposed or demonstrated. EPA does not regulate the discharge of LLD via waste water. • Increased resistance-No evidence that using LLD selects for antibiotic-resistant organisms in nature or mutants survive.

  30. The Benefits of Surface Disinfection • Introduction and principles of disinfection • Review the contribution of the noncritical environment to disease transmission • Justify the use of a disinfectant on noncritical surfaces • Provide recommendations for surface disinfection

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