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Influence of rub-in technique on required application time and hand coverage in hygienic hand disinfection

BACKGROUND: Recent data indicate that full efficacy of a hand rub preparation for hygienic hand disinfection can be achieved within 15 seconds (s). However, the efficacy test used for the European Norm (EN) 1500 samples only the fingertips. Therefore, we investigated hand coverage using sixteen diff...

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Autores principales: Kampf, Günter, Reichel, Mirja, Feil, Yvonne, Eggerstedt, Sven, Kaulfers, Paul-Michael
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2600642/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18959788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-8-149
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author Kampf, Günter
Reichel, Mirja
Feil, Yvonne
Eggerstedt, Sven
Kaulfers, Paul-Michael
author_facet Kampf, Günter
Reichel, Mirja
Feil, Yvonne
Eggerstedt, Sven
Kaulfers, Paul-Michael
author_sort Kampf, Günter
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Recent data indicate that full efficacy of a hand rub preparation for hygienic hand disinfection can be achieved within 15 seconds (s). However, the efficacy test used for the European Norm (EN) 1500 samples only the fingertips. Therefore, we investigated hand coverage using sixteen different application variations. The hand rub was supplemented with a fluorescent dye, and hands were assessed under UV light by a blind test, before and after application. Fifteen non-healthcare workers were used as subjects for each application variation apart from one test which was done with a group of twenty healthcare workers. All tests apart from the reference procedure were performed using 3 mL of hand rub. The EN 1500 reference procedure, which consists of 6 specific rub-in steps performed twice with an aliquot of 3 ml each time, served as a control. In one part of this study, each of the six steps was performed from one to five times before proceeding to the next step. In another part of the study, the entire sequence of six steps was performed from one to five times. Finally, all subjects were instructed to cover both hands completely, irrespective of any specific steps ("responsible application"). Each rub-in technique was evaluated for untreated skin areas. RESULTS: The reference procedure lasted on average 75 s and resulted in 53% of subjects with at least one untreated area on the hands. Five repetitions of the rub-in steps lasted on average 37 s with 67% of subjects having incompletely treated hands. One repetition lasted on average 17 s, and all subjects had at least one untreated area. Repeating the sequence of steps lasted longer, but did not yield a better result. "Responsible application" was quite fast, lasting 25 s among non-healthcare worker subjects and 28 s among healthcare workers. It was also effective, with 53% and 55% of hands being incompletely treated. New techniques were as fast and effective as "responsible application". Large untreated areas were found only with short applications. Fingertips and palms were often covered completely. CONCLUSION: In clinical practice, hand disinfection is apparently better than practitioners of infection control often anticipate. Based on our data, a high-quality hygienic hand disinfection is not possible within 15 s. A 30 s application time can, however, be recommended for clinical practice. The currently recommended six steps of EN 1500 are not really suitable for clinical practice, because they yield comparably poor results. The most appropriate application procedure may be "responsible application", or one of the other new techniques.
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spelling pubmed-26006422008-12-12 Influence of rub-in technique on required application time and hand coverage in hygienic hand disinfection Kampf, Günter Reichel, Mirja Feil, Yvonne Eggerstedt, Sven Kaulfers, Paul-Michael BMC Infect Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Recent data indicate that full efficacy of a hand rub preparation for hygienic hand disinfection can be achieved within 15 seconds (s). However, the efficacy test used for the European Norm (EN) 1500 samples only the fingertips. Therefore, we investigated hand coverage using sixteen different application variations. The hand rub was supplemented with a fluorescent dye, and hands were assessed under UV light by a blind test, before and after application. Fifteen non-healthcare workers were used as subjects for each application variation apart from one test which was done with a group of twenty healthcare workers. All tests apart from the reference procedure were performed using 3 mL of hand rub. The EN 1500 reference procedure, which consists of 6 specific rub-in steps performed twice with an aliquot of 3 ml each time, served as a control. In one part of this study, each of the six steps was performed from one to five times before proceeding to the next step. In another part of the study, the entire sequence of six steps was performed from one to five times. Finally, all subjects were instructed to cover both hands completely, irrespective of any specific steps ("responsible application"). Each rub-in technique was evaluated for untreated skin areas. RESULTS: The reference procedure lasted on average 75 s and resulted in 53% of subjects with at least one untreated area on the hands. Five repetitions of the rub-in steps lasted on average 37 s with 67% of subjects having incompletely treated hands. One repetition lasted on average 17 s, and all subjects had at least one untreated area. Repeating the sequence of steps lasted longer, but did not yield a better result. "Responsible application" was quite fast, lasting 25 s among non-healthcare worker subjects and 28 s among healthcare workers. It was also effective, with 53% and 55% of hands being incompletely treated. New techniques were as fast and effective as "responsible application". Large untreated areas were found only with short applications. Fingertips and palms were often covered completely. CONCLUSION: In clinical practice, hand disinfection is apparently better than practitioners of infection control often anticipate. Based on our data, a high-quality hygienic hand disinfection is not possible within 15 s. A 30 s application time can, however, be recommended for clinical practice. The currently recommended six steps of EN 1500 are not really suitable for clinical practice, because they yield comparably poor results. The most appropriate application procedure may be "responsible application", or one of the other new techniques. BioMed Central 2008-10-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2600642/ /pubmed/18959788 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-8-149 Text en Copyright © 2008 Kampf et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kampf, Günter
Reichel, Mirja
Feil, Yvonne
Eggerstedt, Sven
Kaulfers, Paul-Michael
Influence of rub-in technique on required application time and hand coverage in hygienic hand disinfection
title Influence of rub-in technique on required application time and hand coverage in hygienic hand disinfection
title_full Influence of rub-in technique on required application time and hand coverage in hygienic hand disinfection
title_fullStr Influence of rub-in technique on required application time and hand coverage in hygienic hand disinfection
title_full_unstemmed Influence of rub-in technique on required application time and hand coverage in hygienic hand disinfection
title_short Influence of rub-in technique on required application time and hand coverage in hygienic hand disinfection
title_sort influence of rub-in technique on required application time and hand coverage in hygienic hand disinfection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2600642/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18959788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-8-149
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