Hessling Martin, Haag Robin, Sicks Ben
Ulm University of Applied Sciences, Institute of Medical Engineering and Mechatronics, Ulm, Germany.
GMS Hyg Infect Control. 2021 Nov 2;16:Doc30. doi: 10.3205/dgkh000401. eCollection 2021.
Touchscreens are usually microbially contaminated and can therefore act as fomites inside and outside healthcare environments. Due to the increasing use of such touchscreens and the growing awareness of infection risks, approaches that allow safe and automatic disinfection are desired. Ultraviolet (UV) irradiation, with its known antimicrobial efficacy, could achieve this goal, but should be executed with limited touchscreen degradation, disinfection duration, and energy consumption. It should also pose as little harm as possible to humans even in case of failure. A literature search was performed first to identify the microorganisms most commonly found on touchscreens. Then, the 90% reduction doses (D90 doses) for the different relevant microorganisms and UV spectral ranges were determined from the literature, and irradiation doses are suggested that should reduce most of these important microorganisms by 5 log-levels. The most frequent microorganisms are staphylococci, bacilli, micrococci, enterococci, pseudomonads and with small differences between hospital and community environments, if antibiotic resistance properties are ignored. The determined irradiation doses for a 5 log-reduction of the most frequent microorganisms are about 40 mJ/cm, 80 J/cm, 500 J/cm and 50 mJ/cm for the UV spectral ranges UVC, UVB, UVA and far-UVC, respectively. These doses are also sufficient to inactivate all nosocomial ESKAPE pathogens on touchscreens by at least 99.999%. Disinfection is achievable in all UV spectral ranges, with UVC being the most effective, enabling automatic disinfection within a minute or less. The much higher doses required in the UVB and UVA spectral range result in much longer disinfection durations, with the advantage of a reduced risk to humans. For all kinds of UV irradiation, the doses should be limited to reasonable values to avoid irradiating an already more or less sterile surface and to prevent degradation of touchscreen devices.
触摸屏通常受到微生物污染,因此在医疗环境内外都可能充当传染媒介。由于此类触摸屏的使用日益增加,且人们对感染风险的认识不断提高,因此需要能够实现安全自动消毒的方法。紫外线(UV)照射具有已知的抗菌效果,可以实现这一目标,但应在触摸屏降解有限、消毒持续时间短和能耗低的情况下进行。即使在出现故障的情况下,它对人类造成的危害也应尽可能小。首先进行了文献检索,以确定触摸屏上最常见的微生物。然后,从文献中确定了不同相关微生物和紫外线光谱范围的90%杀灭剂量(D90剂量),并建议了应将这些重要微生物中的大多数减少5个对数级的照射剂量。最常见的微生物是葡萄球菌、杆菌、微球菌、肠球菌、假单胞菌,若忽略抗生素耐药性,医院环境和社区环境之间存在细微差异。对于紫外线光谱范围UVC、UVB、UVA和远UVC,将最常见微生物减少5个对数级的确定照射剂量分别约为40 mJ/cm²、80 J/cm²、500 J/cm²和50 mJ/cm²。这些剂量也足以使触摸屏上所有医院内的ESKAPE病原体失活至少99.999%。在所有紫外线光谱范围内都可以实现消毒,其中UVC最有效,能够在一分钟或更短时间内实现自动消毒。UVB和UVA光谱范围内所需的剂量要高得多,这导致消毒持续时间长得多,其优点是对人类的风险降低。对于所有类型的紫外线照射,剂量应限制在合理值,以避免照射已经或多或少无菌的表面,并防止触摸屏设备降解。