| Literature DB >> 23202690 |
Sabina Fijan1, Sonja Šostar Turk.
Abstract
Textiles are a common material in healthcare facilities; therefore it is important that they do not pose as a vehicle for the transfer of pathogens to patients or hospital workers. During the course of use hospital textiles become contaminated and laundering is necessary. Laundering of healthcare textiles is most commonly adequate, but in some instances, due to inappropriate disinfection or subsequent recontamination, the textiles may become a contaminated inanimate surface with the possibility to transfer pathogens. In this review we searched the published literature in order to answer four review questions: (1) Are there any reports on the survival of microorganisms on hospital textiles after laundering? (2) Are there any reports that indicate the presence of microorganisms on hospital textiles during use? (3) Are there any reports that microorganisms on textiles are a possible source infection of patients? (4) Are there any reports that microorganisms on textiles are a possible source infection for healthcare workers?Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23202690 PMCID: PMC3499872 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph9093330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Reports on the survival of microorganisms on hospital textiles after laundering.
| Described laundering conditions | Added disinfection agent or bleach | Surviving microorganism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 min at 60 °C | No |
| Wilcox & Jones, 1995 [ |
| 10 min at 60 °C or 3 min at 71 °C | No | Certain strains of
| Orr
|
| less than 10 min at 60 °C | 3 mL Peroxyacetic acid/ kg textiles | Fijan
| |
| 20 min at 30 °C | 10 mL Sodium hypochlorate/kg textiles or 12.5 mL peroxyacetic acid/kg textiles | Fijan
| |
| 43 min at 30 °C | 10 mL Sodium hypochlorate/kg textiles |
| |
| 13 min at 49 °C | Added chlorine bleach (without specifications) | Walter
| |
| 66 °C | Added chlorine bleach cycle (without specifications) | Smith
| |
| 8 min at 47.8 °C | 0.58 Chlorine bleach/kg | Predominantly aerobic bacteria, staphylococci and total coliforms | Christian
|
| 77.2 °C | 0.11 Chlorine bleach/kg | ||
| 22.2 °C | Low temperature bleach (without specifications) | Predominantly
| Blaser
|
| 71.1 °C | High temperature bleach (without specifications) | ||
| Typical program for hospital bed linen | 50 ppm Chlorine, 54 ppm peracid, 100 ppm peroxid | Hellickson & Owens, 2007 [ |
Reports on the presence of microorganisms on hospital textiles.
| Surviving microorganism | Hospital textile | Time | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moulds | Sheets, pyjamas | After use by patients | Bureau-Chalot
|
| Coagulase-negative staphylococci,
| Sheets, pyjamas, uniforms | After laundering in hospital laundry | Fijan
|
| Nurses’ uniforms | After 24 h shift | Perry
| |
|
| Bed linen and curtains | After use | Hota
|
| MRSA | Bed linen and uniforms | ||
| Coagulase negative Staphylococci,
| Sheets, pyjamas and uniforms | After laundering in hospital laundries | Fijan
|
| Rotaviral RNA | Sheets, pyjamas and uniforms | After laundering in hospital laundries | Fijan
|
| Parainfluenza virus | Hospital gown | 4 h after inoculation | Brady
|
| Vancomycin resistant enterococci | Bed linen | 11 weeks after inoculation | Hochmuth
|
Reports on hospital textiles as possible source of infection of patients.
| Microorganism | Hospital textile | Reference |
|---|---|---|
|
| Babies’ vests (contamination of dryers) | Brunton, 1995 [ |
|
| Cleaned hospital linen | Barrie
|
| Cleaned hospital linen | Barrie
| |
| Cleaned infants’ nappies | Birch
| |
| Reused towels | Dohmae
| |
| Towels and bedsheets | Sasahara
| |
| MRSA | Bed linen | Creamer & Humphreys, 2008 [ |
| Linen | Shiomori
| |
|
| Patients’ clothes, bed linen | Panagea
|
| VRE | Drawsheet | Bonten
|
|
| Mattress | Ndawula & Brown, 1991 [ |
| Antibiotic resistant coliform bacilli | Blankets, mattresses | Kirby
|
|
| Contaminated socks | English
|
Reports on hospital textiles as possible source of infection of hospital workers.
| Microorganism | Source | Employee | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Handling unclean hospital linen | Hospital laundry personnel | Thomas
|
|
| Handling contaminated laundry | Hospital staff | Shah
|
|
| Handling unclean hospital sheets | Hospital laundry personnel | Datta & Pridie, 1960 [ |
|
| Handling unclean hospital linen | Hospital laundry personnel | Standaert
|
| Hepatitis A virus | Handling unclean hospital linen | Hospital laundry personnel and nurses’ aids | Borg & Portelli, 1999 [ |
| Keeffe, 2004 [ |