Healthcare Hygiene magazine January 2020 | Page 25

All providers should be interested in and know their unit and organizational infection rates, cleaning effectiveness, hand hygiene compliance, etc.” — Mark E. Rupp, MD and between patients or eliminated altogether,” Rupp says. “However, there are a myriad of potential fomites and, as already noted, some can pose a more serious threat than others. We don’t live in a perfect world and resources for our environmental service personnel and clinical support staff are limited. Thus, the degree of likely contamination, what it is likely to be contaminated with, and who it is going to potentially transmit to are important considerations. So, in the previous example of the blood pressure cuff, for the average patient in an ambulatory clinic – I won’t lose too much sleep. The same blood pressure cuff used in a patient with fecal incontinence and widespread skin contamination who is known to be colonized with a pan-resistant Acinetobacter who is being cared for in a clinic that is specialized for solid organ transplant patients – you bet I’m concerned. Confounders such as hand hygiene and the quality of cleaning come into play when evaluating how fomites contribute to the spread of pathogenic organisms. “Hand hygiene is critical,” Rupp confirms. “For example, cell phones are ubiquitous and are in every healthcare worker’s pocket. They chime while a nurse or doctor cares for a patient and often they are tended to. The phone becomes contaminated and is rarely cleaned (lots of studies looking at contamination of all sorts of things – phones, beepers, neck ties, wrist watches, etc.). It is important that after the phone is dealt with, the healthcare worker uses the alcohol gel to disinfect hands before going back to their patient. Similarly, if the environmental services team is doing a good job in daily and terminal cleaning, the burden of contamination is decreased, making it less likely that hands or fomites become contaminated and carry pathogens to the next patient.” Improved cleaning and disinfection, after controlling for other interventions, has been found to reduce the risk of patient infection, according to studies, and Rupp says that experts can argue about the relative benefit for any intervention. “The studies that try to isolate the importance of hand hygiene, environmental cleaning, fomite elimination, etc. are difficult to do, are usually underpowered, and are often fraught with con- founding,” he adds. “However, taken together, the data clearly demonstrate that the environment becomes contaminated and can stay so for long periods of time, the environment can serve as a vehicle or reservoir for transmission to hands and www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com • january 2020 clothing of healthcare personnel and sometimes directly to patients. Environmental cleaning, when done properly, effectively diminishes the amount of contamination and results in decreased transfer to hands, clothing, and patients. We can discuss all day and still not know if this results in 5 percent of nosocomial transmission or 50 percent (probably somewhere in between).” Rupp continues, “When we consider cross-col- onization of patients from the inanimate environment, should we be using tools such as molecular epidemiologic techniques to identify pathogens, should we be measuring the quality of environmental cleaning and hand hygiene over time, and should we think about the link between contaminated surfaces and cross-colonization events in geographic and temporal dimensions?” Rupp adds, “Use of molecular epidemiologic tools – up to whole genomic sequencing – can be very helpful in understanding the dynamics of transmission. These tests are often expensive and time consuming and are probably out of the question in most instances. However, mea- surement, reporting, and optimization of hand hygiene compliance and environmental cleaning (including fomites) should be routinely done by all healthcare organizations. Leadership should be involved. All providers should be interested in and know their unit and organizational infection rates, cleaning effectiveness, hand hygiene compliance, etc. If an organization is doing all this right, they don’t need to be nearly as concerned that the “superbug’ of the day is going to find a nesting spot in their facility and spread wildfire from person to person.” The mobility of devices and equipment around the hospital underscores the need for more awareness of these items’ potential for pathogen transmission, and experts emphasize the importance of raising awareness among healthcare workers that these objects can be highly contaminated. “Devices and equipment roam all over the facility – that why they are called COWs (comput- ers on wheels). Education should be conducted regularly with all healthcare personnel to raise the awareness of this issue and how to combat it. Again, emphasize hand hygiene, environmental cleaning, as well as identification and cleaning of fomites. It may not be too exciting, but it is important. In many instances, it is a matter of going to specific units and identifying every piece Any patient-care items used in healthcare settings can be contaminated with a healthcare- associated pathogen and are a potential fomite, but outbreaks via these fomites can be prevented or minimized by adhering to current recommendations for cleaning and disinfection of devices and surfaces. 25