Longitudinal environmental Staphylococcus contamination in a new small animal veterinary hospital and utility of cleaning checklists

Staphylococci are inhabitants of skin and mucous membranes with Staphylococcus pseudintermedius (SP) and Staphylococcus aureus (SA) serving as important pathogens for animals and people, respectively. Previous research has identified the environment as potentially important in hospital‐associated in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Zoonoses and public health 2021-12, Vol.68 (8), p.947-954
Hauptverfasser: Hunter, Noelle D., Hoet, Armando E., van Balen, Joany, Stull, Jason W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Staphylococci are inhabitants of skin and mucous membranes with Staphylococcus pseudintermedius (SP) and Staphylococcus aureus (SA) serving as important pathogens for animals and people, respectively. Previous research has identified the environment as potentially important in hospital‐associated infections and zoonotic transmission in veterinary settings. The objective of this pilot study was to determine the longitudinal prevalence over repeated samplings of environmental coagulase‐positive Staphylococcus (CPS) in a new veterinary hospital and evaluate associations between contamination and environmental and clinical (caseload, cleaning checklists and staff numbers) factors. Cleaning and disinfection compliance, based on staff‐completed checklists, were reviewed for the three shifts immediately prior to sampling. We hypothesized that over time, environmental contamination would increase as the clinic developed and caseload increased and compliance to cleaning checklists would decrease with increasing caseload. Over 18 months, 351 environmental samples were collected at five sampling times (sampling occurred before opening the hospital and every 3 to 6 months thereafter). Overall contamination with CPS was 30.8% (108/351), with SA (16.8%) and SP (13.1%) identified from the contaminated surfaces. Overall, methicillin‐resistant strains (MRSA and MRSP) were infrequently recovered (combined n = 3;
ISSN:1863-1959
1863-2378
DOI:10.1111/zph.12887