The major findings were:
- The hands of the anesthesia provider were contaminated with one or more major pathogens 66% of the time
- Bacterial transmission to the IV stopcock set occurred in 11.5% of the cases, with 47% of the isolates matching those on the anesthesia provider's hands
- Bacterial transmission to the anesthesia machine occurred in 89% of the cases, with 12% of the isolates matching those on the anesthesia provider's hands
Over the past several years much attention has been paid to improving compliance with surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis and improving hand hygiene compliance outside the OR. Moreover, surgical hand hygiene has been an integral part of the OR routine for eons. However, little attention has been paid to hand hygiene compliance by anesthesia personnel. Kathy and her colleagues have probably now changed that. Ok Anesthesia people, wash up!
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