Healthcare Hygiene magazine January 2020 | Page 13

cover story Making the Case for Cleaning By Kelly M. Pyrek As Palmore and Henderson (2015) acknowledge, “The relative This is the first role that the environment plays in the in a two- transmission of HAIs has been a topic part series of decades-long debate, with persons in examining the the healthcare epidemiology community clinical and vacillating between skepticism and con- fiscal aspects viction. Unlike near-universal acceptance of making of the importance of hand hygiene, the the case for prevailing view of the contribution of the environmental inanimate healthcare environment to the hygiene. spread of HAIs has swung back and forth like a pendulum. Both cultural shifts and new studies have elicited opposing opinions about the role of the environment in HAI transmission and the corollary role of disinfection in reducing these infections. Convincing healthcare personnel to clean their hands at every opportunity is challenging but maintaining a hospital environment that is free from contamination is perhaps even more difficult. A major challenge in determining the precise contributions of the environment to HAI transmission, Palmore and Henderson (2015) add, “is the difficulty of designing studies that are capable of yielding high-quality data.” The lack of rigorous evidence supporting the role of environmental hygiene was addressed several years ago in a study published in The Annals of Internal Medicine, when researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine emphasized that more evidence was needed to identify best methods to clean hospital rooms and thereby prevent infections. This study acknowledged a lack of evidence as to which is the most effective at reducing HAIs. The review, led by Craig A. Umscheid, MD, MSCE, an assistant professor of medicine and epidemiology at the University of Pennsylvania, Jennifer Han, MD, MSCE, an assistant professor of medicine and epidemiology, along with Brian Leas, MS, MA, and Nancy Sullivan, research analysts in the ECRI-Penn AHRQ EPC, revealed major gaps in existing evidence for the Editor’s note www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com • january 2020 best practices for cleaning hospital room surfaces to prevent HAIs and revealed major gaps in existing evidence for the best practices for cleaning hospital room surfaces. The researchers found that comparative effectiveness studies were uncommon; such studies would have directly compared different ways of cleaning, disinfecting, and monitoring the cleanliness of hard surfaces in order to determine which were most effective. There were also relatively few studies that focused on measuring outcomes of most interest to patients, such as changes in HAI rates or the presence of pathogens on patients. Only five studies were randomized controlled trials. Instead, the existing studies compared the magnitude of surface contamination after cleaning with an agent to the magnitude of contamination before cleaning. More than 65 percent of the studies assessed surface contamination as the primary outcome. Less than 35 percent reported on patient-centered outcomes, such as HAI rates or acquisition of a specific organism in the body, known as colonization. The researchers examined three broad categories of evidence: which agents and methods were used to clean hard surfaces; what approaches were available to monitor the effectiveness of cleaning; and what systems-level factors are needed for cleaning and monitoring to be successful. “Our goal was to provide a comprehensive review of evidence in all three domains,” said Umscheid. “While there is a clear need for more patient-centered and comparative effectiveness research, the findings that do exist provide a good place to start in terms of a hospital or health care entity seeking information on ways to mitigate healthcare-asso- ciated infections.” Among its findings, the researchers identified several studies showing that rates of C. difficile fell with the use of bleach-based disinfectants but that a chlorine dioxide-based product was ineffective in reducing C. diff contamination and infection rates. In addition, six studies integrating various wipes moistened with hydrogen peroxide and other chemicals into preventive strategies reported positive outcomes, including sustained reductions in HAIs. Seventeen studies implementing “no-touch” modalities to clean hard surfaces — such as devices that emit ultraviolet light or hydrogen peroxide vapor — reported positive findings, with three specifically demonstrating reductions in infection rates. Seven of eight studies evaluating enhanced coatings on hospital room surfaces, such as copper-coated bed rails, reported positive findings. Surfaces made of solid, copper-based metals or alloys continuously kill bacteria that cause infections. The researchers also highlighted several priority areas for future research, based on their review of the evidence and interviews with leading experts. As Han, et al. (2015) note, “Future research on environmental cleaning and disinfecting to reduce HAIs should address the following key questions: What surfaces, including high-touch objects, should be cleaned and disinfected? How should surfaces be cleaned and disinfected, and what is the comparative effectiveness of different methods? How should cleaning and disinfecting be 13