NOTE: By submitting this form and registering with us, you are providing us with permission to store your personal data and the record of your registration. In addition, registration with the Medical Independent includes granting consent for the delivery of that additional professional content and targeted ads, and the cookies required to deliver same. View our Privacy Policy and Cookie Notice for further details.

You can opt out at anytime by visiting our cookie policy page. In line with the provisions of the GDPR, the provision of your personal data is a requirement necessary to enter into a contract. We must advise you at the point of collecting your personal data that it is a required field, and the consequences of not providing the personal data is that we cannot provide this service to you.


[profilepress-login id="1"]

Don't have an account? Subscribe

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Mobile phones used in hospitals a potential infection risk for patients

By Dermot - 21st Jun 2016

In clinical settings, mobile phones benefit patients by placing useful data and information at the fingertips of health professionals during interactions on the ward, but now concerns are that doctors and nurses are unwittingly exposing vulnerable patients to a potential source of infection.

Previous studies have already shown that the surfaces of mobile phones harbour nosocomial bacteria. Now, a study by the Laboratory of Infectious Agents and Hygiene at the University Hospital of Saint-Étienne in France reveals that mobile devices are often also contaminated by viral RNA.

The research team sampled mobile phones and hospital cordless phones used daily by 114 healthcare workers at the University Hospital of Saint-Étienne in Saint-Priest-en-Jarez, France. Specific assays determined the presence of RNA from potentially epidemic respiratory viruses (influenza A and B, respiratory syncytial virus and human metapneumovirus) and the common enteric viruses rotavirus and norovirus. Healthcare workers also filled out a detailed questionnaire to enable the team to understand more about when and where each phone was used.

Viral RNA was present on 38.5 per cent of the devices; the most prominent contamination was from rotavirus RNA (39 of 109 devices) with respiratory syncytial virus RNA present on three phones and human metapneumovirus RNA on only one. No viral RNA from norovirus or either of the two influenza viruses was detected. The report cautions that the sample size was small and not sufficient to demonstrate any correlation between the presence of viral RNA and a quantifiable risk of nosocomial transmission of viral infection.

“The majority of healthcare workers (64 per cent) used their mobile phones during patient care, which was expected. However, it was surprising that 20 per cent of them admitted never carrying out any hand hygiene procedures, either before or after using their phone, even though all said they knew phones could harbour pathogens,” commented co-author Elizabeth Botelho-Nevers. Many healthcare professionals did not carry out any hand hygiene procedures even if using a mobile phone while making physical contact with patients.

The survey also revealed that cordless hospital phones were cleaned and disinfected less frequently in paediatric departments than on adult wards.

“A multivariate analysis demonstrated a significant association between the presence of viral RNA and the mobile phones of healthcare workers in the paediatric department,” adds Botelho-Nevers, who says the findings should “encourage hospitals to step up hand hygiene protocols and to institute better protocols for cleaning and disinfecting both mobile phones and hospital phones.”

<span>The findings are published in the May issue of the journal </span><em>Clinical Microbiology and Infection,</em> the official journal of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ESCMID). 

ADVERTISEMENT

Latest

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT