An integrated approach for better contamination control in hospital settings

2021 
Disinfection of hospital environments is a cornerstone of intervention strategies to reduce the risk of hospital-associated infections. Many studies show that standard cleaning procedures are not sufficient for proper disinfection of hospital environments and that the addition of no-touch technologies, such us ultraviolet light, can provide deeper sanitisation. This study aims to test whether the application of ultraviolet light after standard procedures improves hygiene levels in the shortest possible time and shows the degree of contamination before and after irradiation. A cross-sectional study was conducted in a real clinical setting in rehabilitation rooms of a contracted clinic "Rugani Hospital" in Monteriggioni (SI), Italy, between December 2019 and August 2020.the study was carried out according to the following protocol: i) quantization of contamination of 12 selected target points in room; ii) attribution to the points of a probability of contamination risk; iii) sampling of a subset of 6 points with probabilistic assignment; iv) evaluation of the pre-post disinfection environmental hygiene using a UV-C system. For the pre-post statistical analysis the non-parametric Wilcoxon test was used; the multivariate MANOVA was used to verify the role of different confounders, with post hoc Bonferroni test. Probabilistic calculations minimised the samplings required to conclude that the application of the ultraviolet light device reduced the level of contamination in a statistically significant manner (p < 0.01) when comparing pre- and post-exposure, with less irradiation time than indicated by the manufacturer.
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