Improving infection control in a veterinary hospital: a detailed study on patterns of faecal contamination to inform changes in practice

Abstract Background The main purpose of this study was to investigate the cleanliness and microbial burden of a veterinary hospital to establish the extent of cross-contamination with faecal bacteria as an aid to reducing nosocomial infections. Enterococci and Escherichia coli were used as faecal in...

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Main Authors: Ashokkumar Singaravelu, Bernadette Leggett, Finola C. Leonard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2023-02-01
Series:Irish Veterinary Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13620-023-00229-w
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author Ashokkumar Singaravelu
Bernadette Leggett
Finola C. Leonard
author_facet Ashokkumar Singaravelu
Bernadette Leggett
Finola C. Leonard
author_sort Ashokkumar Singaravelu
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background The main purpose of this study was to investigate the cleanliness and microbial burden of a veterinary hospital to establish the extent of cross-contamination with faecal bacteria as an aid to reducing nosocomial infections. Enterococci and Escherichia coli were used as faecal indicator organisms as they can survive on inanimate surfaces for months and pose a threat to animal health. The study consisted of several elements: (i) a cross-sectional study to identify sites currently contaminated with faecal organisms that could be usefully included in a longitudinal study, (ii) a 3-week longitudinal study to identify sites from which faecal bacteria were repeatedly recovered, (iii) once-off monitoring of hand hygiene, (iv) a review of all hospitalised cases with confirmed E. coli or enterococcal infection during the 8-week study period to investigate possible hospital-acquired (HAI) infection and relationship with environmental contamination. Environmental surface and hand hygiene were assessed using 3M™ Clean-Trace™ ATP test, 3M™ Petrifilm™ plates and bacteriological culture of Enterococcus species and E. coli. Cross contamination was assessed using results of antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Results In the cross-sectional study, 26 of 113 (24.5%) of sites sampled exceeded the accepted microbial threshold (2.5 CFU/cm2) and Enterococcus species were isolated from 31 (27.4%) and E. coli from 9 (7.9%) of 113 samples. Organic residue and microbial levels were high in the dog kennels even after cleaning and faecal organisms were also recovered from sites such as the dispensary, a student computer and staff common room. Four of 51 (7.8%) hand samples were contaminated with faecal bacteria. Nine sites were monitored on three occasions in the longitudinal study and a total of 23 Escherichia coli and 6 Enterococcus species were recovered. Seven of the nine sites were positive for faecal organisms on more than one occasion. There was no change in cleanliness or microbial burden over 3 weeks. Twenty-one of the 73 isolates (28.8%) recovered during all parts of the study were multi-drug resistant. Enterococci and E. coli isolates with similar resistance patterns were recovered from the environment in the large and small animal hospitals and from a small number of patients during the same timeframe, suggesting possible hospital acquired infections. Conclusions Results suggested that movement between the small and large animal hospital areas may have been responsible for cross-contamination and possible hospital-acquired infections. The data show that cross-sectional and longitudinal monitoring of faecal contamination across all hospital areas can play an important role in informing review of infection control protocols in veterinary hospital settings. Changes in practices in the hospital based on results generated are outlined.
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spelling doaj.art-bf2a4d0bdc6f439194006c8db8bc97df2023-03-22T11:21:43ZengBMCIrish Veterinary Journal2046-04812023-02-0176111310.1186/s13620-023-00229-wImproving infection control in a veterinary hospital: a detailed study on patterns of faecal contamination to inform changes in practiceAshokkumar Singaravelu0Bernadette Leggett1Finola C. Leonard2UCD School of Medicine, University College DublinUCD School of Veterinary Medicine, University College DublinUCD School of Veterinary Medicine, University College DublinAbstract Background The main purpose of this study was to investigate the cleanliness and microbial burden of a veterinary hospital to establish the extent of cross-contamination with faecal bacteria as an aid to reducing nosocomial infections. Enterococci and Escherichia coli were used as faecal indicator organisms as they can survive on inanimate surfaces for months and pose a threat to animal health. The study consisted of several elements: (i) a cross-sectional study to identify sites currently contaminated with faecal organisms that could be usefully included in a longitudinal study, (ii) a 3-week longitudinal study to identify sites from which faecal bacteria were repeatedly recovered, (iii) once-off monitoring of hand hygiene, (iv) a review of all hospitalised cases with confirmed E. coli or enterococcal infection during the 8-week study period to investigate possible hospital-acquired (HAI) infection and relationship with environmental contamination. Environmental surface and hand hygiene were assessed using 3M™ Clean-Trace™ ATP test, 3M™ Petrifilm™ plates and bacteriological culture of Enterococcus species and E. coli. Cross contamination was assessed using results of antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Results In the cross-sectional study, 26 of 113 (24.5%) of sites sampled exceeded the accepted microbial threshold (2.5 CFU/cm2) and Enterococcus species were isolated from 31 (27.4%) and E. coli from 9 (7.9%) of 113 samples. Organic residue and microbial levels were high in the dog kennels even after cleaning and faecal organisms were also recovered from sites such as the dispensary, a student computer and staff common room. Four of 51 (7.8%) hand samples were contaminated with faecal bacteria. Nine sites were monitored on three occasions in the longitudinal study and a total of 23 Escherichia coli and 6 Enterococcus species were recovered. Seven of the nine sites were positive for faecal organisms on more than one occasion. There was no change in cleanliness or microbial burden over 3 weeks. Twenty-one of the 73 isolates (28.8%) recovered during all parts of the study were multi-drug resistant. Enterococci and E. coli isolates with similar resistance patterns were recovered from the environment in the large and small animal hospitals and from a small number of patients during the same timeframe, suggesting possible hospital acquired infections. Conclusions Results suggested that movement between the small and large animal hospital areas may have been responsible for cross-contamination and possible hospital-acquired infections. The data show that cross-sectional and longitudinal monitoring of faecal contamination across all hospital areas can play an important role in informing review of infection control protocols in veterinary hospital settings. Changes in practices in the hospital based on results generated are outlined.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13620-023-00229-wInfection controlVeterinary hospitalFaecal organismsContaminationNosocomial infection
spellingShingle Ashokkumar Singaravelu
Bernadette Leggett
Finola C. Leonard
Improving infection control in a veterinary hospital: a detailed study on patterns of faecal contamination to inform changes in practice
Irish Veterinary Journal
Infection control
Veterinary hospital
Faecal organisms
Contamination
Nosocomial infection
title Improving infection control in a veterinary hospital: a detailed study on patterns of faecal contamination to inform changes in practice
title_full Improving infection control in a veterinary hospital: a detailed study on patterns of faecal contamination to inform changes in practice
title_fullStr Improving infection control in a veterinary hospital: a detailed study on patterns of faecal contamination to inform changes in practice
title_full_unstemmed Improving infection control in a veterinary hospital: a detailed study on patterns of faecal contamination to inform changes in practice
title_short Improving infection control in a veterinary hospital: a detailed study on patterns of faecal contamination to inform changes in practice
title_sort improving infection control in a veterinary hospital a detailed study on patterns of faecal contamination to inform changes in practice
topic Infection control
Veterinary hospital
Faecal organisms
Contamination
Nosocomial infection
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13620-023-00229-w
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AT finolacleonard improvinginfectioncontrolinaveterinaryhospitaladetailedstudyonpatternsoffaecalcontaminationtoinformchangesinpractice