Are our stethoscopes contaminated ?

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Faten Haddad
Jihène Bousselmi
Ali Mrabet
Kamel Ben Fadhel

Abstract

Background: Health care-associated infections are a real public health problem. Contaminated medical equipments such as stethoscopes are often an overlooked vector. In our study, we were interested in proving our doctors stethoscopes contamination and in studying the microbiological profile of isolated germs.
Methods: This was about a cross-sectional study that lasted 2 months (May and June 2014) including 39 personal stethoscopes of all grade doctors working in 8 different departments in Habib Thameur Hospital. The swabs were taken from the membranes of the stethoscopes and sent quickly to our bacteriology service. Then, the bacteriological samples were subcultivated on blood agar. The reading tooks place 24 hours later. Were considered positive the cultures that contained more than 104 colony forming units/ml. Then we proceeded to the identification of the germ.
Results: Fifteen samples from 39 were positive that was 38 %. The coagulase- negative Staphylococcus was the predominant germ. The pathogenic germs were found in 5 positive samples that was 12 % from all the samples. They were distributed as follows: 2 Methicillin-susceptible Staphylococci Aureus, 2 methicillin-resistant coagulase- negative Staphylococci and one Pseudomonas aerogenusa. The pathogenic germs were found in stethoscopes taken from cardiology and intensive care unit (ICU). In cardiology, 7/9 stethoscopes were positive (5 coagulase- negative Staphylococcus among them 2 resistant methicillin and 2 Staphylococcus aureus.) In ICU, 6/13 stethoscopes were positive among them one Pseudomonas aerogenusa.
Conclusion: The stethoscopes constitute bacterial reservoirs. It is necessary to perform a procedure for the good practices of disinfection.

Keywords:

Stethoscope, contamination, epidemiology, healthcare-associated infections

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