| Literature DB >> 28231311 |
Marlene K Wolfe1, Karin Gallandat1, Kyle Daniels1, Anne Marie Desmarais1, Pamela Scheinman2, Daniele Lantagne1.
Abstract
To prevent Ebola transmission, frequent handwashing is recommended in Ebola Treatment Units and communities. However, little is known about which handwashing protocol is most efficacious. We evaluated six handwashing protocols (soap and water, alcohol-based hand sanitizer (ABHS), and 0.05% sodium dichloroisocyanurate, high-test hypochlorite, and stabilized and non-stabilized sodium hypochlorite solutions) for 1) efficacy of handwashing on the removal and inactivation of non-pathogenic model organisms and, 2) persistence of organisms in rinse water. Model organisms E. coli and bacteriophage Phi6 were used to evaluate handwashing with and without organic load added to simulate bodily fluids. Hands were inoculated with test organisms, washed, and rinsed using a glove juice method to retrieve remaining organisms. Impact was estimated by comparing the log reduction in organisms after handwashing to the log reduction without handwashing. Rinse water was collected to test for persistence of organisms. Handwashing resulted in a 1.94-3.01 log reduction in E. coli concentration without, and 2.18-3.34 with, soil load; and a 2.44-3.06 log reduction in Phi6 without, and 2.71-3.69 with, soil load. HTH performed most consistently well, with significantly greater log reductions than other handwashing protocols in three models. However, the magnitude of handwashing efficacy differences was small, suggesting protocols are similarly efficacious. Rinse water demonstrated a 0.28-4.77 log reduction in remaining E. coli without, and 0.21-4.49 with, soil load and a 1.26-2.02 log reduction in Phi6 without, and 1.30-2.20 with, soil load. Chlorine resulted in significantly less persistence of E. coli in both conditions and Phi6 without soil load in rinse water (p<0.001). Thus, chlorine-based methods may offer a benefit of reducing persistence in rinse water. We recommend responders use the most practical handwashing method to ensure hand hygiene in Ebola contexts, considering the potential benefit of chlorine-based methods in rinse water persistence.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28231311 PMCID: PMC5322913 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0172734
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Benefits and drawbacks of commonly used handwashing protocols.
| Handwashing Protocol | Benefits | Drawbacks |
|---|---|---|
| Widely available, acceptable | Does not inactivate pathogens, requires water | |
| Simple, portable | Not widely acceptable or available, expensive | |
| Easy to ship (powdered), long shelf-life, does not clog pipes | ||
| Easy to ship (powdered), long shelf-life | Can cause explosions, clogs pipes | |
| Can be locally produced, does not clog pipes | Shorter shelf-life, difficult to ship | |
| Can be produced on-site, does not clog pipes | Shorter shelf-life, difficult to ship, quality control/manufacturing |
Benefits and drawbacks reflect the expert opinion of responders working with these handwashing protocols during emergency response.
Fig 1Experimental design.
Fig 2Handwashing station.
Fig 3E. coli handwashing results.
Error bars represent standard error of log reduction.
Fig 4Phi6 handwashing results.
Error bars represent standard error of log reduction.
Fig 5E. coli rinse water results.
Error bars represent standard error of log reduction.
Fig 6Phi6 rinse water results.
Error bars represent standard error of log reduction.