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Computer equipment could help MRSA spread

Tags: Safety   Solution  

11 Apr 2005

Keyboards and computer equipment installed in hospitals may aid the spread of 'superbug' bacteria such as MRSA, a study in a Chicago hospital has revealed.

Just touching a keyboard is enough to pick up the bacteria and potentially pass it on to a patient, according to the results of the study. Furthermore, cleaning the equipment with soap and water, according to the manufacturer's instructions, may not remove the infection.

Dr Gary Noskin, medical director of healthcare epidemiology at the Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, who carried out the study, told Reuters that the only solution was frequent hand-washing. "Hands are washed before treating a patient, but hand washing prior to computer use is superfluous. Most hospitals are not aware of this."

Dr Noskin's team contaminated three computer keyboards with common bacteria found in hospitals, namely vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VRE) and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), as well as non-drug resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

While the bacteria that were not resistant to any drugs dissipated after an hour, the two drug-resistant bugs, VRE and MRSA, remained on the keyboard for twenty-four hours.

VRE and MRSA were picked up from the keyboard on the users' fingers even if they were wearing gloves. The only way the bacterial infections were removed were through sluicing the keyboard with antiseptic; however, this may in the long-term end up damaging the computer equipment.

"The emerging trend in hospitals is to have electronic health records," noted Dr Noskin. "Some hospitals are putting computers in every patient room." He suggested the best way of minimising the risk was for clinicians wash their hands after each time they use a computer before touching a patient.

A spokesperson for the NHS Connecting for Health, the agency responsible for the National Programme for IT in the NHS, told E-Health Insider they were aware of the study, and were working closely with the National Patient Safety Agency in their 'cleanyourhands' campaign.

"Clearly patient safety is a top priority for NHS Connecting for Health," said a spokesperson. "We are working with industry leaders in the field, as well as hospital trusts and academia, to ascertain the risks associated with the implementation of IT hardware within the clinical environment.

"Together these parties are working with hardware vendors to specify and deliver innovative and effective solutions to reduce these risks. Early discussions are still in commercial confidence and so we are unable to disclose more detail at this time. "

Dr Noskin presented his findings to a meeting Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America, the US agency responsible for infection control and prevention.

© 2005 E-HEALTH-MEDIA LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Reader's Comments
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Reader's Comments

1

Mobile devices

CAROLE.GLOVER@KGH.NHS.UK

11 Apr 05 13:04

What's the future now, for using PDA's , mobile PC's on trolleys and mobile phones as part of the NPfIT Vision???


2

Mobile Devices

deborah.gill@leedsth.nhs.uk

11 Apr 05 14:04

Presumably similar contamination problems exist with pens and other equipment so we can apply the same protocols that are in place to reduce risk when using these.


3

Why do we not learn from history

felim_mccarthy@yahoo.com

11 Apr 05 15:04

What a wonderful indication that a modern study has just reinvented the findings from observation and change to clinical practice made by Ignaz Semmelweis prior to his death in 1865.

His work published in 1861, based on research from 1847 was so effective in preventing cross contaminations that the incident of puerpural fever dropped precipitously (from 17 percent to 1 percent) -- and remained low as long as the routine of disinfection was not breached.

Unfortunately, as is probably the case in many hospitals today, "many of the older and influential physicians including Prof. Klein, Semmelweis' superior, placed little stock in Semmelweis' doctrine, belittled his work despite the evidence before them, thus diminishing its impact in hospitals and clinics across Austria and Hungary."

Why have we learnt nothing from history?

Perhaps if people washed their hands before touching patients, the rate of infections could be lowered and the need for costly treatments reduced. What a wonderful thing to believe that the introduction of the least human of technologies, the PC / Palm Pilot etc would finally give the greatest benefit to the most human of the components of healthcare, the patient.

What, not another pig flying past the window.


4

Smell the Disinfection

SPBRIDGE@YAHOO.COM

11 Apr 05 23:04

I can remember going to see my father in hospital as a child and recall the strong smell of disinfection that hit you as soon as you entered the hospital. You can't smell it these days. The problem is the COSHH regulations have put a stop to the domestics using an ' Effective' disinfecting solution. I have worked on wards where domestics have actually been out and purchased disinfecting solutions out of their own pockets in order to clean the wards to which they are responsible.

Beuracracy is the cause of all the NHS Troubles these days. More common sense and less 'Pussy Footing' around i say !!


5

Mucky Lap-tops

14 Apr 05 19:04

Perhaps then the wireless tablet with pen is the technology of choice at the bedside and keyboards only used in offices. Isn't this what is planned in NPfIT (CfH)? Tablets and PDA's at bedsides. Or if that fails, soap.


6

IT equpment and MRSA etc

25 Apr 05 09:04

Bad use of equipment Remove key boards from clinical areas. Wrong height for working staff - need to sit down etc. Also it seems transmit infection We need touch screens- at working height, limits free text entry , forces use of structured data input and easier to clean

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