Ssekitoleko Robert T, Oshabaheebwa Solomon, Munabi Ian G, Tusabe Martha S, Namayega C, Ngabirano Beryl A, Matovu Brian, Mugaga Julius, Reichert William M, Joloba Moses L
Biomedical Engineering Unit, Department of Physiology, School of Biomedical Sciences, College of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Anatomy, School of Biomedical Sciences, College of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Oct 16;20(1):1561. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-09662-w.
With many medical equipment in hospitals coming in direct contact with healthcare workers, patients, technicians, cleaners and sometimes care givers, it is important to pay close attention to their capacity in harboring potentially harmful pathogens. The goal of this study was to assess the role that medical equipment may potentially play in hospital acquired infections in four public health facilities in Uganda.
A cross-sectional study was conducted from December 2017 to January 2018 in four public health facilities in Uganda. Each piece of equipment from the neonatal department, imaging department or operating theatre were swabbed at three distinct points: a location in contact with the patient, a location in contact with the user, and a remote location unlikely to be contacted by either the patient or the user. The swabs were analyzed for bacterial growth using standard microbiological methods. Seventeen bacterial isolates were randomly selected and tested for susceptibility/resistance to common antibiotics. The data collected analyzed in STATA version 14.
A total of 192 locations on 65 equipment were swabbed, with 60.4% of these locations testing positive (116/192). Nearly nine of ten equipment (57/65) tested positive for contamination in at least one location, and two out of three equipment (67.7%) tested positive in two or more locations. Of the 116 contaminated locations 52.6% were positive for Bacillus Species, 14.7% were positive for coagulase negative staphylococcus, 12.9% (15/116) were positive for E. coli, while all other bacterial species had a pooled prevalence of 19.8%. Interestingly, 55% of the remote locations were contaminated compared to 66% of the user contacted locations and 60% of the patient contacted locations. Further, 5/17 samples were resistant to at least three of the classes of antibiotics tested including penicillin, glycylcycline, tetracycline, trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole and urinary anti-infectives.
These results provides strong support for strengthening overall disinfection/sterilization practices around medical equipment use in public health facilities in Uganda. There's also need for further research to make a direct link to the bacterial isolates identified and cases of infections recorded among patients in similar settings.
医院中的许多医疗设备会直接接触医护人员、患者、技术人员、清洁人员,有时还会接触护理人员,因此密切关注它们携带潜在有害病原体的能力非常重要。本研究的目的是评估医疗设备在乌干达四个公共卫生机构的医院获得性感染中可能发挥的作用。
2017年12月至2018年1月在乌干达的四个公共卫生机构进行了一项横断面研究。对新生儿科、影像科或手术室的每台设备在三个不同点进行擦拭取样:与患者接触的位置、与使用者接触的位置以及患者和使用者都不太可能接触到的偏远位置。使用标准微生物学方法分析拭子中的细菌生长情况。随机选择17株细菌分离株,测试其对常用抗生素的敏感性/耐药性。所收集的数据在STATA 14版本中进行分析。
共对65台设备上的192个位置进行了擦拭取样,其中60.4%的位置检测呈阳性(116/192)。近十分之九的设备(57/65)在至少一个位置检测出污染呈阳性,三分之二的设备(67.7%)在两个或更多位置检测出阳性。在116个受污染的位置中,52.6%的芽孢杆菌属呈阳性,14.7%的凝固酶阴性葡萄球菌呈阳性,12.9%(15/116)的大肠杆菌呈阳性,而所有其他细菌种类的总体患病率为19.8%。有趣的是,55%的偏远位置受到污染,而与使用者接触的位置为66%,与患者接触的位置为60%。此外,17个样本中有5个对所测试的至少三类抗生素耐药,这些抗生素包括青霉素、甘氨酰环素、四环素、甲氧苄啶磺胺甲恶唑和尿路抗感染药。
这些结果为加强乌干达公共卫生机构中医疗设备使用的整体消毒/灭菌措施提供了有力支持。还需要进一步研究,以直接关联所鉴定的细菌分离株与类似环境中患者记录的感染病例。