Privacy curtains could be reservoir of deadly bacteria: study

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PARIS, April 12, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Hard-to-clean privacy curtains in
hospitals and nursing homes worldwide may be contaminated with deadly drug-
resistant bugs, according to findings to be presented Saturday at an
infectious diseases conference.

More than a fifth of 1,500 samples taken from six post-acute care nursing
facilities in the United States were laced with one or more dangerous
bacteria, including the hospital bug MRSA, researchers found.

Nearly 20,000 MRSA-related deaths occurred in the US in 2017, most of them
from hospital- acquired infections, according to the US Centers for Disease
Control.

“These pathogens on privacy curtains often survive and have the potential
to transfer to other surfaces and patients,” said co-author Lona Mody, a
doctor and researcher for the University of Michigan Medical Center.

“As privacy curtains are used all over the world, it’s a global issue.”

A comparison of bacteria found on the patients and the curtains showed that
both were often contaminated with the same strains.

The bugs in these cases likely moved from the patient to the curtain, the
findings suggested, but the opposite is “certainly possible”, Mody told AFP.

The results, in the pipeline for peer-review publication, were to be
unveiled at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious
Diseases in Amsterdam, running April 13-16.

Despite improvements in hygiene, hospitals awash with antibiotics can
become incubators of drug-resistant bacteria that mutate to survive the drugs
designed to eradicate them.

In-patients, meanwhile, with weakened immune systems and open wounds after
surgery are especially vulnerable to attack.

Typically made of plastic or cotton, curtains that separate beds or
encircle them in private rooms are often cleaned infrequently.

– Dirty hands –

“Hospital policies vary tremendously, but typically include changing
privacy curtains every six months or when visibly soiled,” Mody said.

Previous research has examined their capacity to retain bacteria, but this
is the first to look at a “post-acute” setting, the authors said.

The patients in the skilled nursing facilities were hospitalised on average
22 days.

Bacterial samples from 625 rooms were taken upon admission, and
periodically thereafter up to six months, assuming patients were still on
site.

A total of 22 percent of curtain samples tested positive for multi-drug
resistant bacteria, ranging from 12 to 29 percent, depending on the facility.

The percentage of curtains infected with different bugs ranged from five
percent for MRSA, to six percent for resistant gram-negative bacilli (R-GNB),
and 14 percent for vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) — all potentially
deadly.

“There is an increasing recognition that hospital environments play an
important role in transmission of pathogens,” Mody said.

“Privacy curtains are often touched with dirty hands after a patient
interaction,” she added. “They are cumbersome to disinfect and clean.”

The concentration of bacteria her team found on curtains was higher than on
bedside table tops, but less than toilet seats, bedrails and TV remote
controls.

The researchers said their findings — based on “traditional microbiologic
methods” — needed to be duplicated using more advanced genomic methods.