Contamination of Unused, Nonsterile Gloves in the Critical Care Setting: A Comparison of Bacterial Glove Contamination in Medical, Surgical and Burn Intensive Care Units

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Contamination of Unused, Nonsterile Gloves in the Critical Care Setting : A Comparison of Bacterial Glove Contamination in Medical, Surgical and Burn Intensive Care Units. / Hall, Matthew; Trivedi, Urvish; Rumbaugh, Kendra; Dissanaike, Sharmila.

I: The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles, Bind 2, Nr. 5, 2014, s. 3-10.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Hall, M, Trivedi, U, Rumbaugh, K & Dissanaike, S 2014, 'Contamination of Unused, Nonsterile Gloves in the Critical Care Setting: A Comparison of Bacterial Glove Contamination in Medical, Surgical and Burn Intensive Care Units', The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles, bind 2, nr. 5, s. 3-10. https://doi.org/10.12746/swrccc2014.0205.053

APA

Hall, M., Trivedi, U., Rumbaugh, K., & Dissanaike, S. (2014). Contamination of Unused, Nonsterile Gloves in the Critical Care Setting: A Comparison of Bacterial Glove Contamination in Medical, Surgical and Burn Intensive Care Units. The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles, 2(5), 3-10. https://doi.org/10.12746/swrccc2014.0205.053

Vancouver

Hall M, Trivedi U, Rumbaugh K, Dissanaike S. Contamination of Unused, Nonsterile Gloves in the Critical Care Setting: A Comparison of Bacterial Glove Contamination in Medical, Surgical and Burn Intensive Care Units. The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles. 2014;2(5):3-10. https://doi.org/10.12746/swrccc2014.0205.053

Author

Hall, Matthew ; Trivedi, Urvish ; Rumbaugh, Kendra ; Dissanaike, Sharmila. / Contamination of Unused, Nonsterile Gloves in the Critical Care Setting : A Comparison of Bacterial Glove Contamination in Medical, Surgical and Burn Intensive Care Units. I: The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles. 2014 ; Bind 2, Nr. 5. s. 3-10.

Bibtex

@article{1fc9128ea11c47aa9bd2176e924198c1,
title = "Contamination of Unused, Nonsterile Gloves in the Critical Care Setting: A Comparison of Bacterial Glove Contamination in Medical, Surgical and Burn Intensive Care Units",
abstract = "Objective: To assess the rate and burden of bacterial contamination on unused, nonsterile gloves found in glove boxes in three different specialty intensive care units (ICUs).Design: Descriptive, cross-sectional studySetting: A burn, trauma/surgical, and medical ICU in a 412-bed tertiary care hospital.Subjects: Convenience sample of 90 non-sterile vinyl exam glove pairsMethods: Thirty occupied rooms in each ICU were utilized for collection of glove pair samples. Gloves from opened glove boxes placed in wall-mounted racks for use by healthcare staff were donned by one investigator in a routine, aseptic fashion. The surfaces of both gloves were swabbed, plated onto a contact agar plate and incubated for 48 hours. Resulting colony forming units (CFUs) were counted and recorded for each glove pair sample.Results: Bacterial contaminants were cultured from 73 of 90 (81.1%) glove pairs sampled across all ICUs. Contamination rates of glove samples from the BICU, SICU and MICU were 66.7%, 86.7% and 90.0% respectively. The differences in contamination rate among units was statistically significant (p=0.044). The average contamination burden was 5.83 CFU per glove pair and was not significantly different among units.Conclusions: Despite differences in infection control practices and the composition of pathologies managed in each ICU, the average bioburden of gloves left exposed in the environment was not significantly different. Further research is needed to assess for an association of glove bioburden with nosocomial infection rates and the effects of different infection control practices on the reduction of glove bioburdens.",
keywords = "contamination, ICU, Staphylococci, methicillin resistance",
author = "Matthew Hall and Urvish Trivedi and Kendra Rumbaugh and Sharmila Dissanaike",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.12746/swrccc2014.0205.053",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
pages = "3--10",
journal = "The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles",
issn = "2325-9205",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Contamination of Unused, Nonsterile Gloves in the Critical Care Setting

T2 - A Comparison of Bacterial Glove Contamination in Medical, Surgical and Burn Intensive Care Units

AU - Hall, Matthew

AU - Trivedi, Urvish

AU - Rumbaugh, Kendra

AU - Dissanaike, Sharmila

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Objective: To assess the rate and burden of bacterial contamination on unused, nonsterile gloves found in glove boxes in three different specialty intensive care units (ICUs).Design: Descriptive, cross-sectional studySetting: A burn, trauma/surgical, and medical ICU in a 412-bed tertiary care hospital.Subjects: Convenience sample of 90 non-sterile vinyl exam glove pairsMethods: Thirty occupied rooms in each ICU were utilized for collection of glove pair samples. Gloves from opened glove boxes placed in wall-mounted racks for use by healthcare staff were donned by one investigator in a routine, aseptic fashion. The surfaces of both gloves were swabbed, plated onto a contact agar plate and incubated for 48 hours. Resulting colony forming units (CFUs) were counted and recorded for each glove pair sample.Results: Bacterial contaminants were cultured from 73 of 90 (81.1%) glove pairs sampled across all ICUs. Contamination rates of glove samples from the BICU, SICU and MICU were 66.7%, 86.7% and 90.0% respectively. The differences in contamination rate among units was statistically significant (p=0.044). The average contamination burden was 5.83 CFU per glove pair and was not significantly different among units.Conclusions: Despite differences in infection control practices and the composition of pathologies managed in each ICU, the average bioburden of gloves left exposed in the environment was not significantly different. Further research is needed to assess for an association of glove bioburden with nosocomial infection rates and the effects of different infection control practices on the reduction of glove bioburdens.

AB - Objective: To assess the rate and burden of bacterial contamination on unused, nonsterile gloves found in glove boxes in three different specialty intensive care units (ICUs).Design: Descriptive, cross-sectional studySetting: A burn, trauma/surgical, and medical ICU in a 412-bed tertiary care hospital.Subjects: Convenience sample of 90 non-sterile vinyl exam glove pairsMethods: Thirty occupied rooms in each ICU were utilized for collection of glove pair samples. Gloves from opened glove boxes placed in wall-mounted racks for use by healthcare staff were donned by one investigator in a routine, aseptic fashion. The surfaces of both gloves were swabbed, plated onto a contact agar plate and incubated for 48 hours. Resulting colony forming units (CFUs) were counted and recorded for each glove pair sample.Results: Bacterial contaminants were cultured from 73 of 90 (81.1%) glove pairs sampled across all ICUs. Contamination rates of glove samples from the BICU, SICU and MICU were 66.7%, 86.7% and 90.0% respectively. The differences in contamination rate among units was statistically significant (p=0.044). The average contamination burden was 5.83 CFU per glove pair and was not significantly different among units.Conclusions: Despite differences in infection control practices and the composition of pathologies managed in each ICU, the average bioburden of gloves left exposed in the environment was not significantly different. Further research is needed to assess for an association of glove bioburden with nosocomial infection rates and the effects of different infection control practices on the reduction of glove bioburdens.

KW - contamination

KW - ICU

KW - Staphylococci

KW - methicillin resistance

U2 - 10.12746/swrccc2014.0205.053

DO - 10.12746/swrccc2014.0205.053

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

SP - 3

EP - 10

JO - The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles

JF - The Southwest Respiratory and Critical Care Chronicles

SN - 2325-9205

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 215365507