A spatiotemporal simulation study on the transmission of harmful microorganisms through connected healthcare workers in a hospital ward setting

J. M. van Niekerk*, A. Stein, M. H. E. Doting, M. Lokate, L. M. A. Braakman-Jansen, J. E. W. C. van Gemert-Pijnen

*Corresponding author voor dit werk

    OnderzoeksoutputAcademicpeer review

    7 Citaten (Scopus)
    97 Downloads (Pure)

    Samenvatting

    BackgroundHand transmission of harmful microorganisms may lead to infections and poses a major threat to patients and healthcare workers in healthcare settings. The most effective countermeasure against these transmissions is the adherence to spatiotemporal hand hygiene policies, but adherence rates are relatively low and vary over space and time. The spatiotemporal effects on hand transmission and spread of these microorganisms for varying hand hygiene compliance levels are unknown. This study aims to (1) identify a healthcare worker occupancy group of potential super-spreaders and (2) quantify spatiotemporal effects on the hand transmission and spread of harmful microorganisms for varying levels of hand hygiene compliance caused by this group.MethodsSpatiotemporal data were collected in a hospital ward of an academic hospital using radio frequency identification technology for 7 days. A potential super-spreader healthcare worker occupation group was identified using the frequency identification sensors' contact data. The effects of five probability distributions of hand hygiene compliance and three harmful microorganism transmission rates were simulated using a dynamic agent-based simulation model. The effects of initial simulation assumptions on the simulation results were quantified using five risk outcomes.ResultsNurses, doctors and patients are together responsible for 81.13% of all contacts. Nurses made up 70.68% of all contacts, which is more than five times that of doctors (10.44%). This identifies nurses as the potential super-spreader healthcare worker occupation group. For initial simulation conditions of extreme lack of hand hygiene compliance (5%) and high transmission rates (5% per contact moment), a colonised nurse can transfer microbes to three of the 17 healthcare worker or patients encountered during the 98.4min of visiting 23 rooms while colonised. The harmful microorganism transmission potential for nurses is higher during weeknights (5pm - 7am) and weekends as compared to weekdays (7am - 5pm).ConclusionSpatiotemporal behaviour and social mixing patterns of healthcare can change the expected number of hand transmissions and spread of harmful microorganisms by super-spreaders in a closed healthcare setting. These insights can be used to evaluate spatiotemporal safety behaviours and develop infection prevention and control strategies.

    Originele taal-2English
    Artikelnummer260
    Aantal pagina's14
    TijdschriftBMC Infectious Diseases
    Volume21
    Nummer van het tijdschrift1
    DOI's
    StatusPublished - 12-mrt.-2021

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