Flash News No. 08/2022 | October 27

 

What is UVC cleaning and what are the benefits?
 
Dr. Ian Hosein: “Infection prevention is a matter
of process control and risk calculation”

The existence of dry surface biofilms in hospitals (or any environment, for that matter) is a given, but that doesn’t mean we’re doomed. Reassuringly, Dr. Ian K. Hosein, Consultant Medical Microbiologist at Kings College Hospital in London, explains: “With pragmatic cleaning protocols that include a feedback loop to assure hygiene, we can minimize the possibility that patients will become infected via environmental surface biofilms.”
 
First things first. What exactly is a biofilm? Hosein: “Biofilm refers to a group of organisms, such as bacteria, clustered together. One important characteristic that distinguishes a biofilm from randomly finding living organisms somewhere, is the cooperation between the different types of organisms within a biofilm. For example, the products of one organism can change the local environment within the biofilm and in that way stimulate growth of another organism. Another important aspect is the fact that a biofilm provides a form of protection. This makes the organisms in a biofilm more resistant to changes in their external environment, such as attempts at cleaning.”
 
UV C-light can be used for a variety of purposes, including
disinfection in the cleaning industry.
 
Even if you can’t see it, it’s there
 
Another aspect to keep in mind is that biofilms are not always visible to the naked eye. “If you’re in charge of cleaning in a hospital and you see something dirty, you’ll know that it needs to be cleaned. And so you’ll clean it to a point where you can no longer see the dirt”, Hosein explains. “But if it’s a dry surface biofilm, you’ve probably only made it smaller instead of removing it completely. Partly because you could not see it in the first place, and also because of its protective traits I just discussed. So even though you can’t see it anymore, it’s still there.” You’re probably wondering: if we can’t see it, how do you know it’s there? Because research has shown it. Hosein: “Imagine a patient who was infected with a multi-resistant bacterium. When the patient is discharged from the hospital, he or she vacates the room, and then the room undergoes intensive cleaning commonly referred to as ‘terminal cleaning’. This is designed to remove environmental contamination from the organism concerned, so as not to put the next room occupant at risk.
 
Getting infected from a hospital room
 
He explains how this is possible: “It’s completely normal that the infected patient sheds some of the bacteria into the room. That just happens. These bacteria fall to the floor or get onto the bedside table and form a biofilm. Then when the patient leaves, the cleaners come in and clean the room until it looks clean. But they didn’t kill the living parts of the biofilm, because they couldn’t see it and did not know it was there. So there is nothing that tells them that they haven’t cleaned a surface properly. When the next patient comes in and touches the contaminated bedside table, he or she acquires the same multi-resistant bacterium.”
 
Process control and probability management
 
He continues: “Our main goal is for the patients to not get infected. That is what it’s all about. And for somebody to get infected from an environmental source, several events must happen. Firstly, the environment must be contaminated. And it must stay contaminated even after the cleaners have done their jobs. Secondly, the patient needs to get in contact with the contaminated environment. But if they’re bedbound, they can’t touch the environment. Therefore, the organism must come to them. For instance, through a member of staff who touches the contaminated environment before they touch the patient. We can control all those different steps and minimize the probability of making a patient ill. For instance, the healthcare workers must perform hand hygiene before touching the patient. So, you can see how favorable probabilities can be built into the overall approach to patient protection by focused environmental cleaning using protocols established as ‘more effective’ and then reducing the probability of transmission stepwise by say the donning of personal protection equipment and hand hygiene. I use the term ‘more effective’ since nothing is perfect in process controls but we can reduce the threat level so low as to be negligible.”
 
To summarize, Hosein says: “It’s all about process controls and managing probabilities. A sterile hospital is not possible, so we must accept that the environment gets contaminated and that it contains biofilms. But not every contamination poses a threat to the patients. We need to find a balance where we protect the patients by focusing on things that can get them infected. For that, we need cost-effective, pragmatic protocols that minimize the probability that patients get infected. And those protocols should be based on proper research and data to assure the level of hygiene or cleanliness. Because in the end, human lives are at stake.”
 
For more information on cleaning and disinfection with UVC light, watch the video with Dr. Ian Hosein.
 
 
 
 
 
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