Healthcare Hygiene magazine January 2020 | Page 20

The multiple environmental surfaces in indoor environments are not independent but are linked by hands through human touching behaviors, thus constructing a surface touch network.” 20 means a contact between the two connected surfaces. Since the healthcare worker (HCW)’s routine round behaviors only occurred at special time points, the HCW’s hand are not included in the network analysis. To analyze the surface touch network, we calculated the distances between surfaces and centrality measures (including the degree, betweenness and closeness centralities) of surfaces. The distance, defined as the number of edges in the shortest path connecting two surfaces, indicates how fast contaminants diffuse across multiple surfaces.” The researchers tested two intervention methods on bedding surfaces, bedside table surfaces, as well as public surfaces in the ward, and assumed a baseline scenario where surface cleaning was not performed. They hypothesized several improved scenarios for the two intervention methods: with 1,000 ppm sodium hypochlorite, surface cleaning could yield a 0.70 to 1.65 log10 reduction of MRSA on surfaces; with the use of inefficacious disinfectants or incorrect surface cleaning methods, the reduction could be low, such as 25 percent. The researchers found that, with enough touching behaviors, the MRSA concentration on surfaces presented a stable daily cycle, due to a balance between the MRSA generation and removal mechanisms (including hand hygiene and MRSA inactivation on surfaces). They say the difference in surface touching frequencies at night and in the daytime makes the MRSA concentration vary with time rather than maintain an equilibrium. “The source bedding surfaces exhibited a differ- ent MRSA concentration pattern,” the researchers report. “Since the transfer rate from hands to porous surfaces was much larger than that from porous surfaces to hands, MRSA concentration on the source bedding surface followed the frequency of touching behaviors and was quite high in the daytime and decreased at night. Further, at night, the gain of MRSA to bedding surfaces was lower than the inactivation, so the MRSA concentrations on the source bedding surfaces decreased … we can infer that the optimal cleaning time for the source bedside table surfaces and hands and skins was the end of the night, while that for other surfaces was the beginning of the night.” They continue, “Comparing different surfaces of the same patient, we found that the MRSA concentrations on bedding surfaces were always the highest, which could be explained by three reasons. First, the transfer rate of MRSA from hands to porous surfaces was much higher than that from porous surfaces to hands, which led to a net gain of MRSA at most cases on porous surfaces during the contact. Second, the bedding surfaces were touched at a higher frequency (6/ hour in the daytime and 3/hour at night) than bedside table surfaces (2/hour in the daytime and 0/hour at night), which means the net transmission from hands to bedding surfaces occurred relatively frequently. Third, the MRSA inactivation rate on the porous surfaces (0.0379/ hour) is low relative to that on the skin (0.2112/ hour), so MRSA could survive for a longer period on the bedding surfaces.” Comparing surfaces of different patients, Xiao, et al. (2019) found that those of the index and the adjacent patients had much higher MRSA concentrations than those of normal patients: “Since surfaces of the index patients are sources, the MRSA concentrations on them must be higher than other surfaces to maintain a concentration gradient for the MRSA diffusion. The high MRSA concentration on surfaces of the adjacent patients was caused by HCWs’ routine rounds. During the routine rounds, HCWs directly contacted patients in a fixed sequence. After visiting the index patient, the HCW’s hands carried MRSA, of a high concentration but a limited amount due to the small area of hands. Then, most of the MRSA on the HCW’s hands were transmitted to the surfaces of the adjacent patient and led to more MRSA of the surfaces of the adjacent patient than on surfaces of normal patients.” The researchers conclude that although the MRSA concentrations on different groups of surfaces varied with the transfer rates, inactivation rates and touching frequencies, surfaces of the source patient always had the highest MRSA concentration while those of the normal patients are the lowest. Not surprisingly, the researchers found that public surfaces had higher MRSA concentrations than surfaces of the non-index patients, which might be explained by the distance of the surface touch network, in that the distance from the source to surfaces around the non-index patients was 2 (hands) or 3 (bedding, bedside table and exposed skin surfaces), while the distance from the source to the public surfaces was 1. They explain, “This is consistent with graph theory, in that surfaces separated by longer distances have less communication, and thus less transport of MRSA.” They also found that public surfaces were very influential in the entire transmission process, and that the disruption of these key surfaces had a greater impact on the topology of the network than others, indicating that intervention methods on the public surfaces could be more effective than interventions on other surfaces. Public surfaces also lay on all the paths between the surfaces of the index patient and those of others in the network. As the researchers note, “Without these public surfaces, it would be very difficult for MRSA to spread from the index patient to other patients via the fomite route. With respect to closeness centralities, the public surfaces had january 2020 • www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com