Infection control by point-of-use water filtration in an intensive care unit – a Hungarian case study

Infection control by point-of-use water filtration in an intensive care unit – a Hungarian case study

Publication Year:
2014
Authors:
Barna, Zsófia; Antmann, Katalin; Pászti, Judit; Bánfi, Renáta; Kádár, Mihály; Szax, Anita; Németh, Melinda; Szegő, Eszter; Vargha, Márta
Language:
English
Affiliated Orgs.:
National Institute for Environmental Health Hungary, National Center for Epidemiology Hungary, National Institute for Environmental Health Hungary
Resource Type:
Journal Article
Summary:
Study on the effectiveness of point-of-use water filtration in controlling waterborne infections in emergency response situations.
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Resource Information

Abstract

Hospital tap water is a potential source of pathogenic bacteria associated with nosocomial infections. Infection control should include preventive measures to reduce the risk of waterborne infection. The efficiency of point-of-use water filters in infection control was assessed in the intensive care unit of a Hungarian hospital with long history of nosocomial Pseudomonas aeruginosa cases. All taps in the unit were fitted with disposable point-of-use filters. The incidence of nosocomial P. aeruginosa infections decreased from 2.71 to 0 cases/100 patient days when the filters were in place. Legionnaires’ disease was not observed either during or outside the study period. Before the application of the filters, both P. aeruginosa and Legionella sp. were shown to colonize five of the seven taps. Filtration eliminated both bacteria completely, though secondary contamination was observed. Total genome restriction profiling of environmental and clinical P. aeruginosa isolates have shown the ubiquitous presence of a single genotype. The same genotype was detected in five of the seven previous nosocomial cases, which supports the assumption of water-derived infection. The results demonstrate that point-of-use filters are effective and cost-efficient measures in reducing health-care associated infections.

Resource Type

Journal Article

Publication Year

2014

Author

Barna, Zsófia; Antmann, Katalin; Pászti, Judit; Bánfi, Renáta; Kádár, Mihály; Szax, Anita; Németh, Melinda; Szegő, Eszter; Vargha, Márta

Language

English

Organizational Affiliation

National Institute for Environmental Health Hungary, National Center for Epidemiology Hungary, National Institute for Environmental Health Hungary

Relevant Country

Hungary

Specific Contaminants

Bacteria, P. aeruginosa, Legionella sp.

Specific Solutions

Pall-Aquasafe AQ14F1S

University Affiliation

Semmelweiss University

Business Connect Takeaways

Point-of-use water filtration can be an effective infection control measure in hospital settings, particularly in intensive care units where patients are at higher risk of developing nosocomial infections
The use of disposable filters on all taps in the ICU can significantly reduce the incidence of waterborne infections caused by P. aeruginosa and Legionella sp.
Implementing point-of-use water filtration can result in cost savings for hospitals by reducing the need for expensive disinfection and maintenance procedures

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