BACKGROUND Nonsterile gloves (NSG) are often overused, while the emphasis should lie in hand hygiene (HH). Furthermore, improper HH leads to contamination of NSG in glove boxes. The aim of… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND Nonsterile gloves (NSG) are often overused, while the emphasis should lie in hand hygiene (HH). Furthermore, improper HH leads to contamination of NSG in glove boxes. The aim of this study was to compare microbial loads on hands from health-care workers (HCW) after HH to NSG and to study the influence of position and filling level of glove boxes on contamination rates. METHODS Fingerprints on agar plates were made from randomly chosen HCWs directly after HH. Plates were incubated and colony-forming units (CFU) counted. NSG taken from glove boxes were also sampled. Filling level and position (horizontal vs vertical) of the glove boxes were recorded. RESULTS Median CFU count was similar for hands after HH (N=107, median 1, IQR 5) and NSG (N=185, median 1, IQR 2, p-value 0.33). Only few samples in both groups showed growth of pathogenic bacteria. Neither the filling level (p-value 0.76), nor the position of the glove box (p-value 0.68) had an influence on NSG contamination. CONCLUSION Microbial loads of hands after HH are comparable to NSG. Filling level or position of the glove box did not influence glove contamination. Whether similar microbial counts translate into comparable nosocomial infection rates warrants further research.
               
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