new technology in environmental cleaning and evaluation william a. rutala, phd, mph director,...
TRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and Evaluation William A. Rutala, PhD, MPH Director, Hospital Epidemiology, Occupational Health and Safety; Professor](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062305/5697bf8d1a28abf838c8c5e7/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and Evaluation
William A. Rutala, PhD, MPHDirector, Hospital Epidemiology, Occupational Health and Safety;
Professor of Medicine and Director, Statewide Program for Infection Control and Epidemiology
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and UNC Health Care, Chapel Hill, NC
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DISCLOSURES
• Consultation and Honoraria ASP (Advanced Sterilization Products), Clorox
• Grants CDC, CMS
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New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and EvaluationObjectives
• Understand the pathogens for which contaminated hospital surfaces play a role in transmission• Review new technologies and practices to improve
environmental disinfection• Discuss available options for evaluating environmental
cleaning• Identify at least three ways infection prevention activities can
reduce the contribution of environmental surfaces to HAIs
![Page 4: New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and Evaluation William A. Rutala, PhD, MPH Director, Hospital Epidemiology, Occupational Health and Safety; Professor](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062305/5697bf8d1a28abf838c8c5e7/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and EvaluationObjectives
• Understand the pathogens for which contaminated hospital surfaces play a role in transmission• Review new technologies and practices to improve
environmental disinfection• Discuss available options for evaluating environmental
cleaning• Identify at least three ways infection prevention activities can
reduce the contribution of environmental surfaces to HAIs
![Page 5: New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and Evaluation William A. Rutala, PhD, MPH Director, Hospital Epidemiology, Occupational Health and Safety; Professor](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062305/5697bf8d1a28abf838c8c5e7/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
www.disinfectionandsterilization.org
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ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION LEADS TO HAIs
• There is increasing evidence to support the contribution of the environment to disease transmission• This supports comprehensive disinfecting regimens (goal
is not sterilization) to reduce the risk of acquiring a pathogen from the healthcare environment/equipment
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EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT TO HAIs
• Microbial persistence in the environment In vitro studies and environmental samples MRSA, VRE, Ab, Cd
• Frequent environmental contamination MRSA, VRE, Ab, Cd
• HCW hand contamination MRSA, VRE, Ab, Cd
• Relationship between level of environmental contamination and hand contamination Cd
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EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT TO HAIs
• Person-to-person transmission Molecular link MRSA, VRE, Ab, Cd
• Housing in a room previously occupied by a patient with the pathogen of interest is a risk factor for disease MRSA, VRE, Cd, Ab
• Improved surface cleaning/disinfection reduces disease incidence MRSA, VRE, Cd
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EVALUATION OF HOSPITAL ROOM ASSIGNMENT AND ACQUISITION OF CDI
Study design: Retrospective cohort analysis, 2005-2006
Setting: Medical ICU at a tertiary care hospital
Methods: All patients evaluated for diagnosis of CDI 48 hours after ICU admission and within 30 days after ICU discharge
Results (acquisition of CDI) Admission to room previously occupied
by CDI = 11.0% Admission to room not previously
occupied by CDI = 4.6% (p=0.002)
Shaughnessy MK, et al. ICHE 2011;32:201-206
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RELATIVE RISK OF PATHOGEN ACQUISITIONIF PRIOR ROOM OCCUPANT INFECTED
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4
MDR Acinetobacter (Nseir S, 2011)
C. diff (Shaughnessy M, 2011)
VRE (Drees M, 2008)
MDR Pseudomonas (Nseir S, 2011)
VRE (Huang S, 2006)
VRE* (Dress M, 2008)
MRSA (Huang S, 2006)
* Prior room occupant infected; ^Any room occupant in prior 2 weeks infected. Otter , Yezli, French. ICHE. 2012;32:687-699
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KEY PATHOGENS WHERE ENVIRONMENTIAL SURFACES PLAY A ROLE IN TRANSMISSION
• MRSA• VRE• Acinetobacter spp.• Clostridium difficile
• Norovirus• Rotavirus• SARS
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TRANSMISSION MECHANISMS INVOLVING THE SURFACE ENVIRONMENT
Rutala WA, Weber DJ. In:”SHEA Practical Healthcare Epidemiology” (Lautenbach E, Woeltje KF, Malani PN, eds), 3rd ed, 2010.
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ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION ENDEMIC AND EPIDEMIC MRSAENDEMIC AND EPIDEMIC MRSA
Dancer SJ et al. Lancet ID 2008;8(2):101-13
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ENVIRONMENTAL SURVIVAL OF KEY PATHOGENS ON HOSPITAL SURFACES
Pathogen Survival Time
S. aureus (including MRSA) 7 days to >12 months
Enterococcus spp. (including VRE) 5 days to >46 months
Acinetobacter spp. 3 days to 11 months
Clostridium difficile (spores) >5 months
Norovirus (and feline calicivirus) 8 hours to >2 weeks
Pseudomonas aeruginosa 6 hours to 16 months
Klebsiella spp. 2 hours to >30 months
Adapted from Hota B, et al. Clin Infect Dis 2004;39:1182-9 andKramer A, et al. BMC Infectious Diseases 2006;6:130
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FREQUENCY OF ACQUISITION OF MRSA ON GLOVED HANDS AFTER CONTACT WITH SKIN AND ENVIRONMENTAL SITES
No significant difference on contamination rates of gloved hands after contact with skin or environmental surfaces (40% vs 45%; p=0.59)
Stiefel U, et al. ICHE 2011;32:185-187
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ACQUISITION OF MRSA ON HANDS AFTER CONTACT WITH ENVIRONMENTAL SITES
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ACQUISITION OF MRSA ON HANDS/GLOVES AFTER CONTACT WITH CONTAMINATED EQUIPMENT
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TRANSFER OF MRSA FROM PATIENT OR ENVIRONMENT TO IV DEVICE AND TRANSMISSON OF
PATHOGEN
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TRANSMISSION MECHANISMS INVOLVING THE SURFACE ENVIRONMENT
Rutala WA, Weber DJ. In:”SHEA Practical Healthcare Epidemiology” (Lautenbach E, Woeltje KF, Malani PN, eds), 3rd ed, 2010.
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ACQUISITION OF C. difficile ON PATIENT HANDS AFTER CONTACT WITH ENVIRONMENTAL SITES AND THEN INOCULATION OF MOUTH
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New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and EvaluationObjectives
• Understand the pathogens for which contaminated hospital surfaces play a role in transmission• Review new technologies and practices to improve
environmental disinfection• Discuss available options for evaluating environmental
cleaning• Identify at least three ways infection prevention activities can
reduce the contribution of environmental surfaces to HAIs
![Page 23: New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and Evaluation William A. Rutala, PhD, MPH Director, Hospital Epidemiology, Occupational Health and Safety; Professor](https://reader035.vdocument.in/reader035/viewer/2022062305/5697bf8d1a28abf838c8c5e7/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
TECHNOLOGIES TO IMPROVE DISINFECTION OF ENVIRONMENTAL SURFACES
• New surface disinfectants Improved hydrogen peroxide Electrochemically activated saline solution
• “No touch” terminal disinfection UV light: UV-C or pulsed xenon Hydrogen peroxide systems: Vapor or aerosol Portable devices: UV, steam
• “Self disinfecting” surfaces Heavy metal surface coatings: Silver, copper Sharklet pattern Germicide impregnated surfaces: Triclosan
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TECHNOLOGIES TO IMPROVE DISINFECTION OF ENVIRONMENTAL SURFACES
• New surface disinfectants Improved hydrogen peroxide Electrochemically activated saline solution
• “No touch” terminal disinfection UV light: UV-C or pulsed xenon Hydrogen peroxide systems: Vapor or aerosol Portable devices: UV, steam
• “Self disinfecting” surfaces Heavy metal surface coatings: Silver, copper Sharklet pattern Germicide impregnated surfaces: Triclosan
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LOW-LEVEL DISINFECTION FOR NONCRITICAL EQUIPMENT AND SURFACES
Exposure time > 1 minGermicide Use Concentration
Ethyl or isopropyl alcohol 70-90%Chlorine 100ppm (1:500 dilution)Phenolic UDIodophor UDQuaternary ammonium UDImproved hydrogen peroxide 0.5%, 1.4%____________________________________________________UD=Manufacturer’s recommended use dilution
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IMPROVED HYDROGEN PEROXIDE (HP) SURFACE DISINFECTANT
• Advantages 30 sec -1 min bactericidal and virucidal claim (fastest non-bleach contact
time) 5 min mycobactericidal claim Safe for workers (lowest EPA toxicity category, IV) Benign for the environment; noncorrosive; surface compatible One step cleaner-disinfectant No harsh chemical odor EPA registered (0.5% RTU, 1.4% RTU, wet wipe)
• Disadvantages More expensive than QUAT
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BACTERICIDAL ACTIVITY OF DISINFECTANTS (log10 reduction) WITH A CONTACT TIME OF 1m WITH/WITHOUT FCS. Rutala et al. ICHE. 2012;33:1159
Organism IHP-0.5% 0.5% HP IHP Cleaner-Dis 1.4%
1.4% HP 3.0% HP QUAT
MRSA >6.6 <4.0 >6.5 <4.0 <4.0 5.5
VRE >6.3 <3.6 >6.1 <3.6 <3.6 4.6
MDR-Ab >6.8 <4.3 >6.7 <4.3 <4.3 >6.8
MRSA, FCS >6.7 NT >6.7 NT <4.2 <4.2
VRE, FCS >6.3 NT >6.3 NT <3.8 <3.8
MDR-Ab, FCS
>6.6 NT >6.6 NT <4.1 >6.6
Improved hydrogen peroxide is significantly superior to standard HP at same concentration and superior or similar to the QUAT tested
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Hospital Privacy Curtains(pre- and post-intervention study; sampled curtain, sprayed “grab area” 3x from
6-8” with 1.4% IHP and allowed 2 minute contact; sampled curtain)
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Decontamination of Curtains with Activated HP (1.4%)Rutala, Gergen, Weber. 2012
MICU-CP for: Before DisinfectionCFU/5 Rodacs (#Path)
After DisinfectionCFU/5 Rodacs (#Path)
% Reduction
MRSA 330 (10 MRSA) 21*(0 MRSA) 93.6%
MRSA 186 (24 VRE) 4* (0 VRE) 97.9%
MRSA 108 (10 VRE) 2* (0 VRE) 98.2%
VRE 75 (4 VRE) 0 (0 VRE) 100%
VRE 68 (2 MRSA) 2* (0 MRSA) 97.1%
VRE 98 (40 VRE) 1* (0 VRE) 99.0%
MRSA 618 (341 MRSA) 1* (0 MRSA) 99.8%
MRSA 55 (1 VRE) 0 (0 MRSA) 100%
MRSA, VRE 320 (0 MRSA, 0 VRE) 1* (0 MRSA, 0 VRE) 99.7%
MRSA 288 (0 MRSA) 1* (0 MRSA) 99.7%
Mean 2146/10=215 (432/10=43) 33*/10=3 (0) 98.5%
* All isolates after disinfection were Bacillus sp; now treat CP patient curtains at discharge with IHP
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Novel Methods of Room Disinfection
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EFFECTIVENESS OF UV ROOM DECONTAMINATION
Rutala WA, et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2010;31:1025-1029.
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ROOM DECONTAMINATION WITH UV, HP• Issues-Room decontamination time; where the
occupancy is high and fast patient turnaround time is critical Room decontamination with UV is 25 minutes for vegetative
bacteria and 50 minutes for C. difficile spores HP room decontamination takes approximately 2.5 hours
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Rapid Hospital Room Decontamination Using UV Light With a Nanostructured Reflective Coating
• Assessed the time required to kill HAI pathogens in a room with standard white paint (3-7% UV reflective) versus walls coated with an agent formulated to be reflective to UV-C wavelengths (65% UV reflective)• Coating/painted uses nanoscale metal oxides whose crystal
structures are reflective to UV-C• Coating is white in appearance and can be applied with a brush
or roller in the same way as any common interior latex paint• Cost to coat walls used in this study was estimated to be <$300.
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ROOM DECONTAMINATION USING UV-C WITH A NANOSTRUCTURED UV-REFLECTIVE WALL COATING
Rutala WA, Gergen MF, Weber DJ. ICHE 2013;34:527-529
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EVALUATION OF A HAND HELD UV DEVICE FOR DECONTAMINATION
Nerandzic MM, et al. BMC ID 2012;12
Design: Assessed a handheld UV device (185-230nm)
Methods: Inoculated surfaces Results:
Lab surfaces: 100 mJ/cm2 for ~5s reduced C. difficile spores by 4.4 CFU log10, MRSA by 5.4 log10 CFU and VRE by 6.9 log10 CFU
Keyboards and portable medical equipment: 100 mJ/cm2 for ~5s reduced C. difficile spores by 3.2 CFU log10,
Presence of organic material reduced/eliminated lethal effect of far-UV
Conclusion: Rapidly kills HA pathogens but soil reduces efficacy
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Room Decontamination with UVRutala, Gergen, Weber. 2013
• Objective: Determine the effectiveness of a UVC device• Method: Study carried out in standard hospital room
using Formica sheets contaminated with MRSA, C. difficile
• Results: The effectiveness of UVC radiation in reducing MRSA was more than >99.9% within 5 min and the reduction of C. difficile spores was >99% within 10 min• Conclusion: This UVC device (UVDI) allowed room
decontamination in 5-10 minutes
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Room Decontamination with UVRutala, Gergen, Weber. 2013
Organism (Decontamination Time)
Inoculum TotalDecontaminationLog10 Reduction
DirectDecontaminationLog10 Reduction
IndirectDecontaminationLog10 Reduction
MRSA (5 min) 4.80 3.56 (n=50) 4.10 (n=30) 2.74 (n=20)
C. difficile spores(10 min)
3.69 2.78 (n=50) 3.35 (n=30) 1.80 (n=20)
Delivers lethal dose of UV in 5-10 min
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UV ROOM DECONTAMINATION: ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES
Advantages Reliable biocidal activity against a wide range of pathogens Surfaces and equipment decontaminated Room decontamination is rapid (5-25 min) for vegetative bacteria HVAC system does not need to be disabled and room does not need to be sealed UV is residual free and does not give rise to health and safety concerns No consumable products so operating costs are low (key cost = acquisition)
Disadvantages No studies evaluating whether use reduces HAIs Can only be done for terminal disinfection (i.e., not daily cleaning) All patients and staff must be removed from room Substantial capital equipment costs Does not remove dust and stains which are important to patients/visitors Sensitive use parameters (e.g., UV dose delivered)
Rutala WA, Weber DJ. ICHE 2011;32:743-747
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HYDROGEN PEROXIDE FOR DECONTAMINATION OF THE HOSPITAL ENVIRONMENT
Falagas, et al. J Hosp Infect. 2011;78:171.
Author, Year HP System Pathogen Before HPV After HPV % Reduction
French, 2004 VHP MRSA 61/85-72% 1/85-1% 98
Bates, 2005 VHP Serratia 2/42-5% 0/24-0% 100
Jeanes, 2005 VHP MRSA 10/28-36% 0/50-0% 100
Hardy, 2007 VHP MRSA 7/29-24% 0/29-0% 100
Dryden, 2007 VHP MRSA 8/29-28% 1/29-3% 88
Otter, 2007 VHP MRSA 18/30-60% 1/30-3% 95
Boyce, 2008 VHP C. difficile 11/43-26% 0/37-0% 100
Bartels, 2008 HP dry mist MRSA 4/14-29% 0/14-0% 100
Shapey, 2008 HP dry mist C. difficile 48/203-24% 7/203-3% 88
Barbut, 2009 HP dry mist C. difficile 34/180-19% 4/180-2% 88
Otter, 2010 VHP GNR 10/21-48% 0/63-0% 100
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ROOM DECONTAMINATION WITH HPV
Study design Before and after study of HPV
Outcome C. difficile incidence
Results HPV decreased environmental
contamination with C. difficile (p<0.001), rates on high incidence floors from 2.28 to 1.28 cases per 1,000 pt days (p=0.047), and throughout the hospital from 1.36 to 0.84 cases per 1,000 pt days (p=0.26)
Boyce JM, et al. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2008;29:723-729.
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USE OF HPV TO DECONTAMINATE UNUSED MEDICAL SUPPLIES
Design: Before-after study (assessed hydrogen peroxide vapor) Methods: 5 supply paired items removed patient room after discharge (one cultured before
and one after HPV [items placed on metal rack in room]) Results
7-9% supplies contaminated with 1 or more MDROs; 16% contaminated with potential pathogens None contaminated after exposure to HPV; projected cost savings (6 ICUs): $387,055.15
Conclusion- HPV effectively disinfected the packaging of supply items
Otter JA, et al. ICHE 2013;34:472-478
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HP ROOM DECONTAMINATION: ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES
Advantages Reliable biocidal activity against a wide range of pathogens Surfaces and equipment decontaminated Demonstrated to decrease disease incidence (C. difficile) Residual free and does not give rise to health and safety concerns (aeration units convert
HPV into oxygen and water) Useful for disinfecting complex equipment and furniture Does not require direct or indirect line of sight
Disadvantages Can only be done for terminal disinfection (i.e., not daily cleaning) All patients and staff must be removed from room Decontamination takes approximately 2-5 hours HVAC system must be disabled and the room sealed with tape Substantial capital equipment costs Does not remove dust and stains which are important to patients/visitors Sensitive use parameters (e.g., HP concentration)
Rutala WA, Weber DJ. ICHE (In press)
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SELF DISINFECTING SURFACES
Sharklet Pattern
Copper coatedoverbed table
Antimicrobialeffects of silver
Triclosan pen
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RCT DEMONSTRATING REDUCTION OF HAIs BY USE OF COPPER ALLOY SURFACES
Design: Randomized control trial in ICUs of 3 hospitals Methods: Patients placed in rooms with or without copper alloy surfaces Results: Rate of HAI and/or MRSA or VRE colonization was significantly lower
than in standard ICU rooms (0.071 vs 0.123; P=0.020)
Salgado CD, et alICHE 2013;34:479
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New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and EvaluationObjectives
• Understand the pathogens for which contaminated hospital surfaces play a role in transmission• Review new technologies and practices to improve
environmental disinfection• Discuss available options for evaluating environmental
cleaning• Identify at least three ways infection prevention activities can
reduce the contribution of environmental surfaces to HAIs
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It appears that not only is disinfectant use important but how often is important
Daily disinfection vs clean when soiled
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Daily Disinfection of High-Touch SurfacesKundrapu et al. ICHE 2012;33:1039
Daily disinfection of high-touch surfaces (vs cleaned when soiled) with sporicidal disinfectant (PA) in rooms of patients with CDI and MRSA reduced acquisition of pathogens on hands after contact with surfaces and of hands caring for the patient
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New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and EvaluationObjectives
• Understand the pathogens for which contaminated hospital surfaces play a role in transmission• Review new technologies and practices to improve
environmental disinfection• Discuss available options for evaluating environmental
cleaning• Identify at least three ways infection prevention activities can
reduce the contribution of environmental surfaces to HAIs
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Thoroughness of Environmental CleaningCarling et al. ECCMID, Milan, Italy, May 2011
0
20
40
60
80
100
HEHSG HOSP
IOWA HOSP
OTHER HOSP
OPERATING ROOMS
NICUEMS VEHICLES
ICU DAILY
AMB CHEMO
MD CLINIC
LONG TERM
DIALYSIS
%
DAILY CLEANING
TERMINAL CLEANING
Cle
aned
Mean = 32%
>110,000 Objects
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Mean proportion of surfaces disinfected at terminal cleaning is 32%
Terminal cleaning methods ineffective (products effective practices deficient [surfaces not wiped])
in eliminating epidemiologically important pathogens
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ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION LEADS TO HAIsSuboptimal Cleaning
• There is increasing evidence to support the contribution of the environment to disease transmission• This supports comprehensive disinfecting regimens (goal
is not sterilization) to reduce the risk of acquiring a pathogen from the healthcare environment
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MONITORING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF CLEANINGCooper et al. AJIC 2007;35:338
• Visual assessment-not a reliable indicator of surface cleanliness• ATP bioluminescence-measures organic debris (each unit has
own reading scale, <250-500 RLU) • Microbiological methods-<2.5CFUs/cm2-pass; can be costly and
pathogen specific• Fluorescent marker-transparent, easily cleaned, environmentally
stable marking solution that fluoresces when exposed to an ultraviolet light (applied by IP unbeknown to EVS, after EVS cleaning, markings are reassessed)
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SURFACE EVALUATION USING ATP BIOLUMINESCENCE
Swab surface luciferace tagging of ATP Hand held luminometer
Used in the commercial food preparation industry to evaluate surface cleaning before reuse and as an educational tool for more than 30 years.
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DAZO Solution (AKA – Goo)
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Target After Marking
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TARGET ENHANCED
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TERMINAL ROOM CLEANING: DEMONSTRATION OF IMPROVED CLEANING
Evaluated cleaning before and after an intervention to improve cleaning
36 US acute care hospitals Assessed cleaning using a
fluorescent dye Interventions
Increased education of environmental service workers
Feedback to environmental service workers
†Regularly change “dotted” items to prevent targeting objects
Carling PC, et al. ICHE 2008;29:1035-41
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MONITORING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF CLEANINGCooper et al. AJIC 2007;35:338
• Visual assessment-not a reliable indicator of surface cleanliness• ATP bioluminescence-measures organic debris (each unit
has own reading scale, <250-500 RLU) • Microbiological methods-<2.5CFUs/cm2-pass; can be
costly and pathogen specific• Fluorescent marker
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Comparison of Four Methods to Assess CleanlinessRutala, Gergen, Sickbert-Bennett, Huslage, Weber. 2013
• Purpose: Compared four methods to assess cleanliness
• Methods: Study conducted at UNC Health Care using medical, surgical and pediatric wards (both ICU and non-ICU)
• Results: Per fluorescent markers, 72% (90/125, CI 63-79 %) were classified as clean (based on microbiological data-Rodac<62.5), compared to 27% (34/126, CI 19-36%) were classified as clean according to ATP. 50% surfaces visually clean before cleaning.
• Conclusion: Fluorescent marker is a useful tool in determining how thoroughly a surface is wiped and mimics the microbiological data better than ATP (<500 RLU).
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Percentage of Surfaces Clean by Different Measurement Methods
Rutala, Gergen, Sickbert-Bennett, Huslage, Weber. 2013
Fluorescent marker is a useful tool in determining how thoroughly a surface is wiped and mimics the microbiological data better than ATP
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New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and EvaluationObjectives
• Understand the pathogens for which contaminated hospital surfaces play a role in transmission• Review new technologies and practices to improve
environmental disinfection• Discuss available options for evaluating environmental
cleaning• Identify at least three ways infection prevention activities can
reduce the contribution of environmental surfaces to HAIs
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Number 1
Monitor and improve thoroughness of cleaning
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Thoroughness of Environmental CleaningCarling et al. ECCMID, Milan, Italy, May 2011
0
20
40
60
80
100
HEHSG HOSP
IOWA HOSP
OTHER HOSP
OPERATING ROOMS
NICUEMS VEHICLES
ICU DAILY
AMB CHEMO
MD CLINIC
LONG TERM
DIALYSIS
%
DAILY CLEANING
TERMINAL CLEANING
Cle
aned
Mean = 32%
>110,000 Objects
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Wipes Cotton, Disposable, Microfiber, Cellulose-Based, Nonwoven Spunlace
Wipe should have sufficient wetness to achieve the disinfectant contact time (e.g. >1 minute)
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ALL “TOUCHABLE” (HAND CONTACT) SURFACES SHOULD BE WIPED WITH SPORICIDE
“High touch” objects only recently defined (no significant differences in microbial contamination of different surfaces) and
“high risk” objects not epidemiologically defined.
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OPTIONS FOR EVALUATING ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANING
Guh, Carling. December 2010. CDC
• Joint effort of ES and IC• Responsibilities of ES staff and other staff for cleaning
surfaces clearly defined• Education of ES staff (must be trained, motivated and
knowledgeable about IC) to define expectations• Development of measures for monitoring• Interventions to optimize cleaning• Report results to ICC and facility leadership
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INFECTION PREVENTION: WHAT THE CEO/COO NEEDS TO KNOW
• Environment contributes to HAIs. Leadership must understand the role of EVS in preventing HAIs. Improved thoroughness of cleaning results in: Decreased infections (improved patient outcomes) Decreased costs (HAIs often not reimbursable; 1 HAI equivalent
to EVS FTE!) Improved patient satisfaction (patients equate dirty rooms with
poor care) Meets CMS/TJC requirements
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Number 2
Interventions to optimize cleaning/disinfecting
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BEST PRACTICES FOR ROOM DISINFECTION
• Follow the CDC Guideline for Disinfection and Sterilization with regard to choosing an appropriate germicide and best practices for environmental disinfection
• Appropriately train environmental service workers on clean/disinfection of the environment (thoroughness. contact time, concentration, wipe change frequency, which product to use) and proper use of PPE
• Develop measures for monitoring thoroughness of cleaning (e.g., fluorescent dye, ATP, checklists)
• Assure that nursing and environmental service have agreed what items (e.g., sensitive equipment) are to be clean/disinfected by nursing and what items (e.g., environmental surfaces) are to be cleaned/disinfected by environmental service workers. Staff must have sufficient time. Increasing workload compromising infection control activities.
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VALUE OF SEQUENTIAL INTERVENTIONS TO IMPROVE DISINFECTION OF C. difficile ROOMS
Design: Prospective intervention Interventions
1. Fluorescent markers used to provide monitoring and feedback on cleaning
2. UV irradiation used for terminal disinfection of CDI rooms
3. Enhanced disinfection of CDI rooms including dedicated daily disinfection team
Results Cleaning improvement: 47%→87% Reduction CDI positive room cultures: 67%
(baseline)→57% (1) →35% (2)→7% (3) Sitzlar B, et al. ICHE 2013;34:459-465
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Number 3
Continue to evaluate “no-touch” methods to reduce HAIs
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Novel Methods of Room Disinfection
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USE OF HPV TO REDUCE RISK OF ACQUISITION OF MDROs
• Design: 30 mo prospective cohort study with hydrogen peroxide vapor (HPV) intervention to assess risks of colonization or infection with MDROs
• Methods:12 mo pre-intervention phase followed by HPV use on 3 units for terminal disinfection
• Results Prior room occupant colonized or infected with MDRO in 22% of cases Patients admitted to HPV decontaminated rooms 64% less likely to acquire any MDRO (95% CI,
0.19-0.70) and 80% less likely to acquire VRE (95% CI, 0.08-0.52) Risk of C. difficile, MRSA and MDR-GNRs individually reduced but not significantly Proportion of rooms environmentally contaminated with MDROs significantly reduced (RR, 0.65,
P=0.03)
• Conclusion-HPV reduced the risk of acquiring MDROs compared to standard cleaning
Passaretti CL, et al. Clin Infect Dis 2013;56:27-35
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HOW TO ASSESS WHETHER TO ADOPT A NEW TECHNOLOGY FOR DISINFECTION OF ROOM SURFACES
• Safe for patients and HCP• Demonstration it reduces bioburden on room surfaces
Vegetative bacteria (MRSA, VRE) Non-enveloped viruses (norovirus) and spore formers (C. difficile)
• Demonstration it reduces HAIs• Cost effective (i.e., compared with other modalities as
demonstrated by cost-effective analysis)
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New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and EvaluationObjectives
• Understand the pathogens for which contaminated hospital surfaces play a role in transmission• Review new technologies and practices to improve
environmental disinfection• Discuss available options for evaluating environmental
cleaning• Identify at least three ways infection prevention activities can
reduce the contribution of environmental surfaces to HAIs
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New Technology in Environmental Cleaning and EvaluationConclusions
• The contaminated surface environment in hospital rooms is important in the transmission of healthcare-associated pathogens (MRSA, VRE, C. difficile, Acinetobacter)
• Potential methods of reducing transmission of these pathogens include: improved room cleaning/disinfection, “no-touch” methods, and ‘self-disinfecting” surfaces
• Thoroughness of cleaning should be monitored and a fluorescent marker is useful in determining how thoroughly a surface is wiped and mimics the microbiological data better then ATP
• Three ways to reduce contribution of the environment: improve thoroughness of cleaning; optimize cleaning/disinfecting; evaluate “no touch” methods
• “No touch” methods have been demonstrated to reduce HAIs in a few studies
• If data continue to show benefit, consider use of HP/UV during outbreaks, after CP patients
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THANK YOU!
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www.disinfectionandsterilization.org