Hospital surface contamination in wards occupied by patients infected with MRSA or MSSA in a Brazilian university hospital

  • K.S. Carvalho
  • M.C. Melo
  • G.B. Melo
  • P.P. Gontijo-Filho
Keywords: environmental contamination; nosocomial infections; Staphylococcus aureus.

Abstract

The hospital environment, especially surfaces, represents a secondary reservoir for pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus. The present study was carried out at the Hospital de Clínicas da Universidade Federal de Uberlândia (HC-UFU) in Brazil, from January to August 2004, with the aim of qualitatively and quantitatively assessing the presence of S. aureus on surfaces touched by hands (bed rail, bedside table and door handle), on the floor and in the air, in wards where the patients were infected or not infected with this organism. Twenty-six wards with at least one infected patient and 26 wards with uninfected patients were investigated. Surfaces and air were sampled during bed making, by means of sterile 10cm2 adhesive tapes and 90mm-diameter exposed culture plates, respectively. Cultures were carried out on Egg Yolk Salt Agar, containing 7.5% NaCl and 1% egg yolk, and colonies identified by lecithinase and coagulase tests and Gram stain. About 50% of the wards were S. aureus contaminated, without significant differences between the groups (46.1% in the infected patient wards versus 53.8% in controls); the correlation between counts of the pathogen on the surfaces and in the air was 66.7%. In spite of the fact that these bacteria were frequently present in the assessed wards, the microbial density was low (less than 1 CFU/cm2). The association between environmental contamination and the epidemiology of S. aureus nosocomial infections is complex and thus further investigations are needed to reach a better understanding of this relationship.

Published
2007-05-01
Section
Research Article