Gormley Thomas, Markel Troy A, Jones Howard W, Wagner Jennifer, Greeley Damon, Clarke James H, Abkowitz Mark, Ostojic John
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN.
Department of Surgery, Riley Hospital for Children at Indiana University Health, Indianapolis, IN.
Am J Infect Control. 2017 Apr 1;45(4):354-359. doi: 10.1016/j.ajic.2016.11.001. Epub 2016 Dec 21.
Sufficient quantities of quality air and controlled, unidirectional flow are important elements in providing a safe building environment for operating rooms.
To make dynamic assessments of an operating room environment, a validated method of testing the multiple factors influencing the air quality in health care settings needed to be constructed. These include the following: temperature, humidity, particle load, number of microbial contaminants, pressurization, air velocity, and air distribution. The team developed the name environmental quality indicators (EQIs) to describe the overall air quality based on the actual measurements of these properties taken during the mock surgical procedures. These indicators were measured at 3 different hospitals during mock surgical procedures to simulate actual operating room conditions. EQIs included microbial assessments at the operating table and the back instrument table and real-time analysis of particle counts at 9 different defined locations in the operating suites. Air velocities were measured at the face of the supply diffusers, at the sterile field, at the back table, and at a return grille.
The testing protocol provided consistent and comparable measurements of air quality indicators between institutions. At 20 air changes per hour (ACH), and an average temperature of 66.3°F, the median of the microbial contaminants for the 3 operating room sites ranged from 3-22 colony forming units (CFU)/m at the sterile field and 5-27 CFU/m at the back table. At 20 ACH, the median levels of the 0.5-µm particles at the 3 sites were 85,079, 85,325, and 912,232 in particles per cubic meter, with a predictable increase in particle load in the non-high-efficiency particulate air-filtered operating room site. Using a comparison with cleanroom standards, the microbial and particle counts in all 3 operating rooms were equivalent to International Organization for Standardization classifications 7 and 8 during the mock surgical procedures.
The EQI protocol was measurable and repeatable and therefore can be safely used to evaluate air quality within the health care environment to provide guidance for operational practices and regulatory requirements.
充足的优质空气以及可控的单向气流是为手术室提供安全建筑环境的重要因素。
为了对手术室环境进行动态评估,需要构建一种经过验证的方法来测试影响医疗环境空气质量的多种因素。这些因素包括:温度、湿度、颗粒负荷、微生物污染物数量、压差、风速和气流分布。该团队开发了环境质量指标(EQIs)这一名称,用于根据模拟手术过程中对这些特性的实际测量来描述整体空气质量。在模拟手术过程中,于3家不同医院对这些指标进行测量,以模拟实际手术室条件。环境质量指标包括手术台和器械台后方的微生物评估,以及手术套房内9个不同指定位置的颗粒计数实时分析。在送风扩散器表面、无菌区域、器械台后方和回风格栅处测量风速。
该测试方案在各机构之间提供了一致且可比的空气质量指标测量结果。在每小时换气20次(ACH)且平均温度为66.3°F的情况下,3个手术室场地的微生物污染物中位数在无菌区域为3 - 22菌落形成单位(CFU)/立方米,在器械台后方为5 - 27 CFU/立方米。在每小时换气20次时,3个场地0.5微米颗粒的中位数水平分别为每立方米85,079、85,325和912,232个颗粒,在未使用高效空气过滤器的手术室场地颗粒负荷有可预测的增加。与洁净室标准进行比较,在模拟手术过程中,所有3个手术室的微生物和颗粒计数相当于国际标准化组织7级和8级。
环境质量指标方案具有可测量性和可重复性,因此可安全用于评估医疗环境中的空气质量,为操作实践和监管要求提供指导。