| Literature DB >> 35601190 |
Zemachu Ashuro1, Kuma Diriba2, Abel Afework3, Gose Husen Washo4, Abriham Shiferaw Areba5, Girum G/Meskel Kanno1, Habtamu Endashaw Hareru6, Abdene Weya Kaso6, Mehret Tesfu6.
Abstract
Background: In both residential and hospital indoor environments, humans can be exposed to airborne microorganisms. The hospital's indoor air may contain a large number of disease-causing agents brought in by patients, staff, students, visitors, ventilation, or the outside. Hospitalized patients are at a higher risk of infection due to confined spaces, crowdedness, and poor infection prevention practices, which can accumulate and create favorable conditions for the growth and multiplication of microorganisms. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate the indoor air bacterial load in Dilla University Hospital, Southern Ethiopia.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial load; hospital wards; indoor air and settling plate
Year: 2022 PMID: 35601190 PMCID: PMC9121508 DOI: 10.1177/11786302221100047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Insights ISSN: 1178-6302
Figure 1.Location of the study area.
Figure 2.Cultured Petri dishes.
Bacterial counts in air samples collected from different rooms at Dilla University Hospital, 2021.
| Department/wards | Sample collection unit | Bacterial growth by CFU/m3 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Week 3 | ||||
| Morning | Afternoon | Morning | Afternoon | ||
| Obstetrics | Delivery room | 1120 | 1115 | 1180 | 990 |
| Waiting room | 2120 | 2100 | 1950 | 1670 | |
| Postnatal room | 1190 | 2195 | 1650 | 1750 | |
| Surgical | Female room | 1050 | 1000 | 1060 | 970 |
| Male room | 1125 | 980 | 1325 | 990 | |
| Pediatric surgery room | 1220 | 1015 | 1120 | 1045 | |
| Pediatrics | Stable room | 2110 | 1500 | 2200 | 970 |
| Phase one | 1540 | 1050 | 990 | 785 | |
| Emergency | Yellow room | 1200 | 710 | 1250 | 990 |
| Pediatrics room | 890 | 680 | 620 | 890 | |
| Medical | Male critical room | 2120 | 925 | 2000 | 1550 |
| Female critical room | 1480 | 1040 | 950 | 850 | |
| NICU | Preterm critical | 510 | 300 | 500 | 380 |
| Term critical | 400 | 480 | 540 | 490 | |
| Gynecology | High risk | 930 | 640 | 800 | 870 |
| Maternity room | 2140 | 690 | 2130 | 755 | |
| Orthopedics ward | Orthopedics inside | 1070 | 765 | 1150 | 885 |
| Orthopedics outside | 1000 | 880 | 950 | 700 | |
Abbreviations: CFU, Colony Forming Unit; NICU, Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
The mean bacterial concentrations, temperature, and humidity of inpatient units at Dilla University Hospital, Southern Ethiopia, 2021.
| Wards | Bacteria (CFU/m3) | Temperature (°C) | RH (%) | WHO guidelines |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Obstetrics | 1585.83 | 27 | 61.1 | Bacteria
(<1000 CFU/m3) |
| Surgical | 1075 | 27.3 | 62.3 | |
| Pediatrics | 1393.12 | 27.2 | 66.5 | |
| Emergency | 903.75 | 26.5 | 61.2 | |
| Medical | 1364.37 | 27.9 | 67.8 | |
| NICU | 450 | 26.6 | 64.2 | |
| Gynecology | 1119.37 | 28.2 | 62.9 | |
| Orthopedics ward | 925 | 28.3 | 67 |
Abbreviations: CFU, Colony Forming Unit; NICU, Neonatal Intensive Care Unit; RH, Relative Humidity.
Figure 3.Bacterial contamination of indoor air of Dilla University Hospital, Southern Ethiopia, 2021.
Figure 4.Gram-positive rod bacteria.
Figure 5.Gram-negative cocci bacteria.