A new, real-life multi-site study has found that washrooms have significantly-less bacterial contamination when equipped with paper towels for hand drying instead of using jet air dryers.
The study, led by Professor Mark Wilcox of the University of Leeds and Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, was carried out in France, Italy, and UK and examined the extent of environmental contamination in hospital washrooms from potential bacterial pathogens according to hand-drying method.
Antibiotic-resistant bacteria including MRSA and ESBL-resistant enterococci were detected more frequently in the washrooms when jet air dryers were in use.
“The findings will have important implications for hand-drying guidance in healthcare settings,” said Professor Wilcox, “and they should be of particular interest to infection prevention and control doctors and nurses, procurement managers, and all responsible for minimising the spread of cross infection.”
The findings will have important implications for hand-drying guidance in healthcare settings
The study design was conceived and carried out independently by research scientists at three different hospitals: Professor Wilcox at Leeds General Infirmary; Professor Frédéric Barbut of the infection control unit at Hospital Saint-Antoine in Paris; and Professor Silvio Brusaferro, of the department of medicine at Udine University Hospital in Italy.
The study compared two washrooms per hospital. Each had paper towel dispensers and jet air hand dryers, but only one drying method was available to use at any given time.
Each was frequented by patients, visitors and staff.
A crossover design compared contamination levels within each setting over a 12-week period.
During the study, 120 sampling sessions in total in each of the three hospitals were carried out.
The independent study was undertaken in 2017 and supported with a grant from ETS.
Bacteria recovered included methicillin susceptible (MSSA) and resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), enterococci and enterobacteria, including ESBL (Extended-spectrum β-lactamase producers) producing bacteria.
In general, bacterial contamination was lower in washrooms using paper towels (PT) than those using jet air dryers (JAD); and total bacterial recovery was significantly greater from the JAD outer surface versus the PT dispenser at all three sites (median 100-300—vs 0-10 colony-forming units (CFU) respectively all p<0.0001).
This latest research demonstrates that paper towels offer the most-hygienic way to dry hands and minimise the spread of bacteria including MRSA, enterobacteria and enterococci following a visit to the washroom
While contamination in France and the UK was similar, it was markedly lower in Italian washrooms, thought to be due to a combination of a lower footfall and different cleaning practices.
There were differences between the three locations, and significantly-more bacteria were recovered from the floors of JAD washrooms in the UK and France (median 24 v 191 CFU, p<0.00001).
In the UK overall recovery of MSSA was three times more common and six-fold higher from JAD versus PT surfaces (both p<0.0001).
Professor Barbut said: “In France we saw significant differences in bacterial contamination between the two types of hand-drying method. Higher numbers of bacteria were recovered from the floors and drier surfaces in the JAD condition than when using PT. In particular ESBL-bacteria were recovered from dust twice as much during JAD versus PT use.”
Professor Brusaferro added: “We found the dispersion of micro-organisms to be more than 25 times greater with jet air dryers than single-use paper towels. Indeed, Italian infection control personnel traditionally avoid the use of jet air dryers in hospitals.”
While hand hygiene is a fundamental component of infection prevention, there are few studies on the contribution of hand-drying method to the dissemination of potential pathogens.
We already had both laboratory and in-situ evidence. Now, with this study, we also have real-world evidence that jet air dryers spread greater levels of bacteria
Previous studies, including those undertaken by Professor Wilcox and Keith Redway of the University of Westminster, also found that electric dryers can contaminate both the air and the surfaces with bacteria and viruses.
“We already had both laboratory and in-situ evidence. Now, with this study, we also have real-world evidence that jet air dryers spread greater levels of bacteria,” explained Professor Wilcox.
“This latest research demonstrates that paper towels offer the most-hygienic way to dry hands and minimise the spread of bacteria including MRSA, enterobacteria and enterococci following a visit to the washroom.”
The findings back up previous research which also favoured the use of single-use paper towels