Environmental Contact and Self-contact Patterns of Healthcare Workers: Implications for Infection Prevention and Control

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Abstract

Background: Respiratory viruses on fomites can be transferred to sites susceptible to infection via contact by hands or other fomites. Methods: Care for hospitalized patients with viral respiratory infections was observed in the patient room for 3-hour periods at an acute care academic medical center for over a 2 year period. One trained observer recorded the healthcare activities performed, contacts with fomites, and self-contacts made by healthcare workers (HCWs), while another observer recorded fomite contacts of patients during the encounter using predefined checklists. Results: The surface contacted by HCWs during the majority of visits was the patient (90%). Environmental surfaces contacted by HCWs frequently during healthcare activities included the tray table (48%), bed surface (41%), bed rail (41%), computer station (37%), and intravenous pole (32%). HCWs touched their own torso and mask in 32% and 29% of the visits, respectively. HCWs' self-contacts differed significantly among HCW job roles, with providers and respiratory therapists contacting themselves significantly more times than nurses and nurse technicians (P

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Phan, L. T., Maita, D., Mortiz, D. C., Bleasdale, S. C., & Jones, R. M. (2019). Environmental Contact and Self-contact Patterns of Healthcare Workers: Implications for Infection Prevention and Control. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 69, S178–S184. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciz558

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