Literature DB >> 22428552

NHS connecting for health: healthcare professionals, mobile technology, and infection control.

Richard R W Brady1, Shruti Chitnis, Ross W Stewart, Catriona Graham, Satheesh Yalamarthi, Keith Morris.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mobile phones improve the efficiency of clinical communication and are increasingly involved in all areas of healthcare delivery. Despite this, healthcare workers' mobile phones provide a known reservoir of pathogenic bacteria, with the potential to undermine infection control efforts aimed at the reducing bacterial cross-contamination in hospitals. This potential could be amplified further when employers require doctors to carry additional electronic devices for communication, without concurrently providing appropriate guidance on decontamination or use.
METHODS: Eighty-seven on-call doctors' mobile phones were sampled for bacterial growth prior to, and 12 h after, a cleaning intervention involving 70% isopropyl alcohol.
RESULTS: Seventy-eight percent of doctors were aware that mobile phones could carry pathogenic bacteria, but only 8% cleaned their phones regularly. The cleaning intervention reduced the number of phones that grew bacteria by 79% (55% [48 of 87] before versus 16% [14 of 87] after cleaning). Eight percent of the phones grew Staphyloccus aureus, and 44.8% of phones grew Gram-positive cocci. All S. aureus isolates were methicillin-sensitive. Bacterial contamination was not associated with gender, specialty, or seniority of the phone user (p>0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: Simple cleaning interventions can reduce the surface bioburden of hospital-provided doctors' mobile phones and therefore the potential for cross-contamination. This cleaning intervention is inexpensive, easily instituted, and effective. Healthcare workers should carry the minimum number of electronic devices on their person, maintain good hand hygiene, and clean their device appropriately in order to minimize the potential for cross-contamination in the work place.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22428552     DOI: 10.1089/tmj.2011.0147

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Telemed J E Health        ISSN: 1530-5627            Impact factor:   3.536


  8 in total

1.  Interpretive flexibility in mobile health: lessons from a government-sponsored home care program.

Authors:  Jeppe Agger Nielsen; Lars Mathiassen
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2013-10-30       Impact factor: 5.428

2.  An integrative review of the impact of mobile technologies used by healthcare professionals to support education and practice.

Authors:  Ping Guo; Kim Watts; Heather Wharrad
Journal:  Nurs Open       Date:  2015-11-27

3.  Mobile Phones as a Potential Vehicle of Infection in a Hospital Setting.

Authors:  Yi Chao Foong; Mark Green; Ahmad Zargari; Romana Siddique; Vanessa Tan; Terry Brain; Kathryn Ogden
Journal:  J Occup Environ Hyg       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 2.155

4.  Contamination of healthcare workers' mobile phones by epidemic viruses.

Authors:  S Pillet; P Berthelot; A Gagneux-Brunon; O Mory; C Gay; A Viallon; F Lucht; B Pozzetto; E Botelho-Nevers
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Infect       Date:  2015-12-20       Impact factor: 8.067

5.  Challenges for the dental radiology clinic in times of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Paulo Victor Teixeira Doriguêtto; Julia Pereira Americano; Karina Lopes Devito
Journal:  Oral Radiol       Date:  2020-06-20       Impact factor: 1.852

6.  Nurses' use of mobile devices to access information in health care environments in australia: a survey of undergraduate students.

Authors:  Carey Mather; Elizabeth Cummings; Penny Allen
Journal:  JMIR Mhealth Uhealth       Date:  2014-12-10       Impact factor: 4.773

7.  Mobile health application to assist doctors in antibiotic prescription - an approach for antibiotic stewardship.

Authors:  Felipe Francisco Tuon; Juliano Gasparetto; Luciana Cristina Wollmann; Thyago Proença de Moraes
Journal:  Braz J Infect Dis       Date:  2017-09-21       Impact factor: 3.257

8.  Healthcare workers' beliefs, attitudes and compliance with mobile phone hygiene in a main operating theatre complex.

Authors:  Xin Yu Adeline Leong; Shin Yuet Chong; Si En Angel Koh; Bee Chin Yeo; Kwee Yuen Tan; Moi Lin Ling
Journal:  Infect Prev Pract       Date:  2019-12-13
  8 in total

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