Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Contamination of Common Area and Rehabilitation Gym Environment with Multidrug‐Resistant Organisms - American Geriatric Society

OBJECTIVES

To quantify the multidrug‐resistant organism (MDRO) burden of high‐touch common area and rehabilitation gym surfaces, and to assess microorganism transfer potential during rehabilitation sessions.

DESIGN

Prospective study of environmental contamination.

SETTING

Nursing home (NH).

PARTICIPANTS

Six Michigan NHs.

MEASUREMENTS

Monthly samples from common area surfaces (eg, living room), rehabilitation equipment, and rehabilitation personnel hands were screened for methicillin‐resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin‐resistant enterococci (VRE), and resistant gram‐negative bacilli (R‐GNB). To assess microorganism transfer potential, we conducted an in‐depth assessment of microorganism transfer during 10 rehabilitation sessions. Microorganism transfer was defined as the identification of a microorganism on a destination surface that was uncontaminated before the rehabilitation session. Patient frequency of common area usage was also assessed qualitatively.

RESULTS

We obtained 1338 common area specimens from 180 monthly facility visits, of which 13.4% (179/1338) were MDRO positive: MRSA, 3.8%; VRE, 5.8%; and R‐GNB, 5.1%. A total of 64% (116/180) of sampling visits had at least one MDRO‐positive common area specimen. Within rehabilitation gyms, we obtained 521 equipment and 190 personnel hand specimens during 60 monthly visits. Of the equipment specimens collected, 7.7% (40/521) were MDRO positive: MRSA, 2.5%; VRE, 4.0%; and R‐GNB, 1.9%. Of the 190 rehabilitation personnel hand specimens collected, 3.7% (7/190) were MDRO positive. Overall, 55% (33/60) of rehabilitation gym visits had at least one MDRO‐positive specimen. Microorganism transfer assessment during 10 rehabilitation sessions revealed 35 opportunities for transfer during which microorganism transfer occurred in 17.1% (6/35) of opportunities.

CONCLUSION

NH common areas and rehabilitation gyms are MDRO reservoirs that may contribute to the transmission of healthcare‐associated pathogens. Because NHs accommodate the increasing short‐stay patient population, developing effective interventions that reduce MDRO transmission in the common area and rehabilitation gym environment should be considered an infection prevention priority.



from Wiley: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society: Table of Contents https://ift.tt/2M5hsSA
via IFTTT

No comments:

Post a Comment