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  • #69469
    Gerald Cha
    Participant

    Author:
    Gerald Cha

    Email:
    Gerald.Chan@sjog.org.au

    Organisation:

    State:

    Dear all,
    I’m looking for evidence to back us up on not having fans in patient rooms (especially seeing that summer is around the corner).
    I can’t seem to locate any supportive articles on this.
    Has there been any studies done that demonstrate an increased rate of infection/colonisation (MRSA, MSSA, etc.) through fan usage in a healthcare setting?
    Cheers,
    Gerald

    Gerald Chan
    Coordinator Infection Control

    St John of God Murdoch Hospital
    100 Murdoch Drive
    MURDOCH. WA 6150

    P: 9366 1552
    M: 0405 495 906 (7804)
    F: 9311 4685
    E: Gerald.Chan@sjog.org.au
    W: http://www.sjog.org.au/murdoch
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    #69470
    Michael Wishart
    Participant

    Author:
    Michael Wishart

    Email:
    Michael.Wishart@hsn.org.au

    Organisation:

    State:

    Hi Gerard

    I recall seeing a study years ago, I think UK based so maybe in JHI, that showed MRSA in dust on portable fans. Never have seen anything that linked increase in MRSA or HAI directly to portable fans, though; that would be epidemiologically difficult to show, I think. Too many other variables.

    Doesn’t mean fans are not bad, though. 🙂 Especially when not maintained well. Ask if they cleaned thoroughly (meaning the fan blades) between each patient use. I suspect not!

    Cheers
    Michael

    Michael Wishart
    CNC Infection Control
    Holy Spirit Northside Private Hospital
    627 Rode Road, Chermside, Qld 4032
    t: (07) 3326 3068 | f: (07) 3326 3523
    e: Michael.Wishart@hsn.org.au
    w:www.holyspiritnorthside.org.au
    Please consider the environment before printing this email

    ________________________________

    Dear all,

    I’m looking for evidence to back us up on not having fans in patient rooms (especially seeing that summer is around the corner).

    I can’t seem to locate any supportive articles on this.

    Has there been any studies done that demonstrate an increased rate of infection/colonisation (MRSA, MSSA, etc.) through fan usage in a healthcare setting?

    Cheers,
    Gerald

    Gerald Chan
    Coordinator Infection Control

    St John of God Murdoch Hospital
    100 Murdoch Drive
    MURDOCH. WA 6150

    P: 9366 1552
    M: 0405 495 906 (7804)
    F: 9311 4685

    E: Gerald.Chan@sjog.org.au
    W: http://www.sjog.org.au/murdoch

    facebook.com/stjohnofgodmurdoch

    twitter.com/sjgh_murdoch

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    #69471
    Janet G. Wallace
    Participant

    Author:
    Janet G. Wallace

    Email:
    Janet.Wallace@HNEHEALTH.NSW.GOV.AU

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    State:

    HI
    I recently saw one of those new style fans in use – the ones with no blades that look like an empty circle. Very easy to clean and decreased OHS risk from spinning blades.
    regards
    Janet
    Janet Wallace

    Staff Health Coordinator | Hunter New England Health
    Tel 02 4924 6844 | Fax 02 4924 6845 | Mob 0439 769 033 | janet.wallace@hnehealth.nsw.gov.au

    Hi Gerard

    I recall seeing a study years ago, I think UK based so maybe in JHI, that showed MRSA in dust on portable fans. Never have seen anything that linked increase in MRSA or HAI directly to portable fans, though; that would be epidemiologically difficult to show, I think. Too many other variables.

    Doesn’t mean fans are not bad, though. 🙂 Especially when not maintained well. Ask if they cleaned thoroughly (meaning the fan blades) between each patient use. I suspect not!

    Cheers
    Michael

    Michael Wishart
    CNC Infection Control
    Holy Spirit Northside Private Hospital
    627 Rode Road, Chermside, Qld 4032
    t: (07) 3326 3068 | f: (07) 3326 3523
    e: Michael.Wishart@hsn.org.au
    w:www.holyspiritnorthside.org.au
    Please consider the environment before printing this email

    ________________________________
    Dear all,

    I’m looking for evidence to back us up on not having fans in patient rooms (especially seeing that summer is around the corner).

    I can’t seem to locate any supportive articles on this.

    Has there been any studies done that demonstrate an increased rate of infection/colonisation (MRSA, MSSA, etc.) through fan usage in a healthcare setting?

    Cheers,
    Gerald

    Gerald Chan
    Coordinator Infection Control

    St John of God Murdoch Hospital
    100 Murdoch Drive
    MURDOCH. WA 6150

    P: 9366 1552
    M: 0405 495 906 (7804)
    F: 9311 4685

    E: Gerald.Chan@sjog.org.au
    W: http://www.sjog.org.au/murdoch

    facebook.com/stjohnofgodmurdoch

    twitter.com/sjgh_murdoch

    Messages posted to this list are solely the opinion of the authors, and do not represent the opinion of ACIPC.

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    #69473
    Lee, Rosie
    Participant

    Author:
    Lee, Rosie

    Email:
    Rosie.Lee@HEALTH.WA.GOV.AU

    Organisation:

    State:

    Hi Gerald

    I would agree Michael. It is not possible to have a study proving every
    item does not result in infection. Using infection control principles
    blowing air in a ward environment cannot be a good principle. If a
    patient is heavily colonised with an antibiotic resistant organism (ARO)
    then blowing skin squames will result in contamination. There are many
    studies indicating contamination linked to ARO’s in particular MRSA
    across the ward. Risk assessment may have to be used.

    Regards

    Rosie

    Rosie Lee
    RN. BSc. CICP

    Coordinator – Infection Prevention & Management
    SMH Service – Royal Perth Hospital

    Ph + 61 8 9224 2805 Fax + 61 8 9224 1989

    IMPORTANT NOTICE: The contents of this email (including any attachments)
    may be privileged and confidential. Any unauthorised use of its
    contents is expressly prohibited. If you received this email in error,
    please advise me by reply email or telephone

    ________________________________

    Behalf Of Michael Wishart

    Hi Gerard

    I recall seeing a study years ago, I think UK based so maybe in JHI,
    that showed MRSA in dust on portable fans. Never have seen anything that
    linked increase in MRSA or HAI directly to portable fans, though; that
    would be epidemiologically difficult to show, I think. Too many other
    variables.

    Doesn’t mean fans are not bad, though. 🙂 Especially when not maintained
    well. Ask if they cleaned thoroughly (meaning the fan blades) between
    each patient use. I suspect not!

    Cheers
    Michael

    Michael Wishart

    CNC Infection Control

    Holy Spirit Northside Private Hospital

    627 Rode Road, Chermside, Qld 4032

    t: (07) 3326 3068 | f: (07) 3326 3523

    e: Michael.Wishart@hsn.org.au

    w:www.holyspiritnorthside.org.au

    Please consider the environment before printing this email

    ________________________________

    Gerald Chan [Gerald.Chan@SJOG.ORG.AU]

    Dear all,

    I’m looking for evidence to back us up on not having fans in patient
    rooms (especially seeing that summer is around the corner).

    I can’t seem to locate any supportive articles on this.

    Has there been any studies done that demonstrate an increased rate of
    infection/colonisation (MRSA, MSSA, etc.) through fan usage in a
    healthcare setting?

    Cheers,

    Gerald

    Gerald Chan

    Coordinator Infection Control

    St John of God Murdoch Hospital
    100 Murdoch Drive
    MURDOCH. WA 6150

    P: 9366 1552

    M: 0405 495 906 (7804)
    F: 9311 4685

    E: Gerald.Chan@sjog.org.au

    W: http://www.sjog.org.au/murdoch

    facebook.com/stjohnofgodmurdoch

    twitter.com/sjgh_murdoch

    intended recipient. They may contain confidential or privileged
    information. This information may not necessarily be the view of St John
    of God Health Care Inc (SJGHC). SJGHC does not warrant, represent or
    guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information. SJGHC does
    not accept liability for any loss or damage in connection with the
    information. If you are not the intended recipient then any use,
    reliance, interference with, disclosure, distribution or copying of this
    information by you is unauthorised and prohibited. If you have received
    this email in error then please notify the sender by return email and
    delete all copies. SJGHC does not waive any privilege.

    Messages posted to this list are solely the opinion of the authors, and
    do not represent the opinion of ACIPC.

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    party without the express consent of the sender. The Communication may
    contain copyright material of St Vincent’s Health & Aged Care(“SVHAC”),
    or any of its related entities or of third parties. If you are not the
    intended recipient of the Communication, please notify the sender
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    copy, print, retransmit, store or act in reliance on the Communication.
    Any views expressed in the Communication are those of the individual
    sender only, unless expressly stated to be those of SVHAC. SVHAC does
    not guarantee the integrity of the Communication, or that it is free
    from errors, viruses or interference. Thank-you.

    Message protected by MailGuard: e-mail anti-virus, anti-spam and content
    filtering.
    http://www.mailguard.com.au/mg

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    do not represent the opinion of ACIPC.

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    #69481
    Gerald Cha
    Participant

    Author:
    Gerald Cha

    Email:
    Gerald.Chan@sjog.org.au

    Organisation:

    State:

    Thanks once again, Glenys.
    It’s great to know that a study was already done that took a step
    further in looking into air currents and surface contamination in a
    controlled environment.
    Awesome to know that they’d actually utilised a biological aerosol
    chamber as that knocks off the bulk of variables that may influence the
    outcome.
    This study would positively influence (especially from an Infection
    Prevention perspective) the way patient rooms of the future are designed
    and how airflow systems are engineered.
    I’ll hunt down the full article.
    Now if only they’d added carpet to the study!
    Cheers,
    Gerald

    Gerald Chan
    Coordinator Infection Control

    St John of God Murdoch Hospital
    100 Murdoch Drive
    MURDOCH. WA 6150

    P: 9366 1552
    M: 0405 495 906 (7804)
    F: 9311 4685
    E: Gerald.Chan@sjog.org.au
    W: http://www.sjog.org.au/murdoch
    facebook.com/stjohnofgodmurdoch (
    http://www.facebook.com/stjohnofgodmurdoch )
    twitter.com/sjgh_murdoch ( http://www.twitter.com/sjgh_murdoch )
    >>> Glenys Harrington 28/10/2012 10:10 AM
    >>>

    Hi Gerald,
    This may in part answer your question although I have not been able to
    get hold of the full article.
    Publication – M.F. King, C.J. Noakes, P.A. Sleigh, M.A. Camargo-Valero.
    Bioaerosol Deposition in Single and Two-Bed Hospital Rooms: A Numerical
    and Experimental Study. Building and Environment. 2012.
    Extract about the article from Infection Control Today(ICT).
    Hospital superbugs can float on air currents and contaminate surfaces
    far from infected patients beds, according to University of Leeds
    researchers. The results of the study, which was funded by the
    Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), may explain
    why, despite strict cleaning regimes and hygiene controls, some
    hospitals still struggle to prevent bacteria moving from patient to
    patient.
    It is already recognized that hospital superbugs, such as MRSA and C.
    difficile, can be spread through contact. Patients, visitors or even
    hospital staff can inadvertently touch surfaces contaminated with
    bacteria and then pass the infection on to others, resulting in a great
    stress in hospitals on keeping hands and surfaces clean.
    But the University of Leeds research showed that coughing, sneezing or
    simply shaking the bed linens can send superbugs into flight, allowing
    them to contaminate recently cleaned surfaces.
    PhD student Marco-Felipe King used a biological aerosol chamber, one of
    a handful in the world, to replicate conditions in one- and two-bedded
    hospital rooms. He released tiny aerosol droplets containing
    Staphyloccus aureus from a heated mannequin simulating the heat emitted
    by a human body. He placed open petri dishes where other patients beds,
    bedside tables, chairs and washbasins might be and then checked where
    the bacteria landed and grew.
    The results confirmed that contamination can spread to surfaces across
    a ward. The level of contamination immediately around the patients bed
    was high but you would expect that. Hospitals keep beds clean and
    disinfect the tables and surfaces next to beds, says Dr. Cath Noakes,
    from the Universitys School of Civil Engineering, who supervised the
    work. However, we also captured significant quantities of bacteria
    right across the room, up to 3.5 meters away and especially along the
    route of the airflows in the room.
    We now need to find out whether this airborne dispersion is an
    important route of spreading infection, adds co-supervisor Dr. Andy
    Sleigh.
    The researchers are hoping that computer modeling will help them
    determine the risk. The findings have been compared to airflow
    simulations of the mock hospital rooms and the research team have shown
    that they are able to accurately predict how airborne particles can be
    deposited on surfaces.
    Using our understanding of airflow dynamics, we can now use these
    models to investigate how different ward layouts and different positions
    of windows, doors and air vents could help prevent microorganisms being
    deposited on accessible surfaces, says King.
    The international design and engineering firm Arup, which designs
    hospitals, part sponsored the study. Phil Nedin, director and global
    healthcare business leader at Arup, says: We are looking at healthcare
    facilities of the future and it is important that we look at key issues
    such as infection control. Being involved in microbiological studies
    that inform airflow modeling in potentially infectious environments
    allows us to get a clear understanding of the risks in these particular
    environments.
    The paper, Bioaerosol Deposition in Single and Two-Bed Hospital Rooms:
    A Numerical and Experimental Study, was published in the journal
    Building and Environment.
    This research is funded by an EPSRC Challenging Engineering grant held
    by Dr. Cath Noakes. Marco-Felipe Kings PhD was also partially sponsored
    by Arup.
    Bioaerosol Deposition in Single and Two-Bed Hospital Rooms: A Numerical
    and Experimental Study. Building and Environment. 2012.
    http://www.infectioncontroltoday.com/news/2012/10/superbugs-ride-air-current
    regards
    Glenys

    Behalf Of Gerald Chan

    Thanks Rosie, Michael and all for your responses.

    I was hoping for a study that at least attempted to demonstrate that
    common skin pathogens do get dispersed quite significantly by fans…
    understandably, this is an obvious “common sense” thing to ICPs but
    surprisingly, to the general public (and even for some nurses), this
    doesn’t click.

    This generation demands for evidence for everything (and rightly so if
    we can back ourselves up with that).

    It would be great if a study was done whereby MSSA/MRSA positive
    patients cared for in 2 controlled environments, either a vinyl floor
    single room or a carpeted single room, then utilised fans (which have
    been cleaned) and we compared culture plates (or an air sampling device
    fit for this) placed vertically in the direct air stream of the fans
    (one at a closer proximity to the fan and maybe another placed past the
    patient)… obviously this needs more looking into! 🙂

    I am not a fan (pardon the pun!) of fans nor do I like carpets in a
    healthcare setting but there hasn’t been any strong supportive evidence
    to support what would be seen as obvious IC concerns.

    I guess cleaning and a risk assessment would be the way to go for now.

    Thanks again for all comments/feedback.

    Regards,

    Gerald

    Gerald Chan

    Coordinator Infection Control

    St John of God Murdoch Hospital
    100 Murdoch Drive
    MURDOCH. WA 6150

    P: 9366 1552

    M: 0405 495 906 (7804)
    F: 9311 4685

    E: Gerald.Chan@sjog.org.au

    W: http://www.sjog.org.au/murdoch

    facebook.com/stjohnofgodmurdoch (
    http://www.facebook.com/stjohnofgodmurdoch )

    twitter.com/sjgh_murdoch ( http://www.twitter.com/sjgh_murdoch )

    >>> “Lee, Rosie” 26/10/2012 7:46 AM >>>

    Hi Gerald
    I would agree Michael. It is not possible to have a study proving every
    item does not result in infection. Using infection control principles
    blowing air in a ward environment cannot be a good principle. If a
    patient is heavily colonised with an antibiotic resistant organism (ARO)
    then blowing skin squames will result in contamination. There are many
    studies indicating contamination linked to AROs in particular MRSA
    across the ward. Risk assessment may have to be used.

    Regards
    Rosie
    Rosie Lee
    RN. BSc. CICP
    Coordinator Infection Prevention & Management
    SMH Service – Royal Perth Hospital
    Ph + 61 8 9224 2805 Fax + 61 8 9224 1989
    IMPORTANT NOTICE: The contents of this email (including any
    attachments) may be privileged and confidential. Any unauthorised use
    of its contents is expressly prohibited. If you received this email in
    error, please advise me by reply email or telephone

    Behalf Of Michael Wishart

    Hi Gerard

    I recall seeing a study years ago, I think UK based so maybe in JHI,
    that showed MRSA in dust on portable fans. Never have seen anything that
    linked increase in MRSA or HAI directly to portable fans, though; that
    would be epidemiologically difficult to show, I think. Too many other
    variables.

    Doesn’t mean fans are not bad, though. 🙂 Especially when not
    maintained well. Ask if they cleaned thoroughly (meaning the fan blades)
    between each patient use. I suspect not!

    Cheers
    Michael

    Michael Wishart
    CNC Infection Control
    Holy Spirit Northside Private Hospital
    627 Rode Road, Chermside, Qld 4032
    t: (07) 3326 3068 | f: (07) 3326 3523
    e: Michael.Wishart@hsn.org.au
    w:www.holyspiritnorthside.org.au (
    https://mail.svhac.org.au/OWA/UrlBlockedError.aspx )
    Please consider the environment before printing this email

    ( http://www.acipcconference.com.au/ )

    Gerald Chan [Gerald.Chan@SJOG.ORG.AU]

    Dear all,

    I’m looking for evidence to back us up on not having fans in patient
    rooms (especially seeing that summer is around the corner).

    I can’t seem to locate any supportive articles on this.

    Has there been any studies done that demonstrate an increased rate of
    infection/colonisation (MRSA, MSSA, etc.) through fan usage in a
    healthcare setting?

    Cheers,

    Gerald

    Gerald Chan

    Coordinator Infection Control

    St John of God Murdoch Hospital
    100 Murdoch Drive
    MURDOCH. WA 6150

    P: 9366 1552

    M: 0405 495 906 (7804)
    F: 9311 4685

    E: Gerald.Chan@sjog.org.au

    W: http://www.sjog.org.au/murdoch

    facebook.com/stjohnofgodmurdoch (
    http://www.facebook.com/stjohnofgodmurdoch )

    twitter.com/sjgh_murdoch ( http://www.twitter.com/sjgh_murdoch )

    intended recipient. They may contain confidential or privileged
    information. This information may not necessarily be the view of St John
    of God Health Care Inc (SJGHC). SJGHC does not warrant, represent or
    guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information. SJGHC does
    not accept liability for any loss or damage in connection with the
    information. If you are not the intended recipient then any use,
    reliance, interference with, disclosure, distribution or copying of this
    information by you is unauthorised and prohibited. If you have received
    this email in error then please notify the sender by return email and
    delete all copies. SJGHC does not waive any privilege.

    Messages posted to this list are solely the opinion of the authors, and
    do not represent the opinion of ACIPC.
    Archive of all messages are available at
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