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COST ACTION 920 |
Inventory of QMRA Studies in Europe |
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Data
sheet
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Pathogen |
No specific pathogen |
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Country or region |
United States |
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Transmission route |
From |
Unwashed hands |
To |
Washed hands |
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Specific product(s) |
None |
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End-point(s) |
Concentration of bacteria on hands after various methods of hand washing |
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Reports or publications
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Bibliographic reference |
Montville,R.; Chen,Y.H.; Schaffner,D.W. 2002. Risk assessment of hand washing efficacy using literature and experimental data. International Journal of Food Microbiology, 73(2-3):305-313. |
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Abstract |
This study simulated factors that
influence the levels of bacteria on foodservice workers' hands. Relevant data
were collected from the scientific literature and from laboratory
experiments. Literature information collected included: initial bacterial
counts on hands and water faucet spigots, bacterial population changes during
hand washing as effected by soap type, sanitizing agent, drying method, and
the presence of rings. Experimental data were also collected using Enterobacter
aerogenes as a surrogate for transient bacteria. Both literature and
experimental data were translated into appropriate discrete or probability
distribution functions. The appropriate statistical distribution for each
phase of the hand washing process was determined. These distributions were:
initial count on hands, beta (2.82, 2.32, 7.5); washing reduction using
regular soap, beta (3.01, 1.91, - 3.00, 0.60); washing reduction using
antimicrobial soap, beta (4.19, 2.99, - 4.50, 1.50); washing reduction using
chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG), triangular (- 4.75, - 1.00, 0); reductions
from hot air drying, beta (3.52, 1.92, 0.20, 1.00); reduction from paper
towel drying, triangular (- 2.25, - 0.75, 0); reduction due to alcohol
sanitizer, gamma (1.23, 4.42) - 5.8; reduction due to alcohol-free sanitizer,
gamma (2.22, 5.38) - 5.00; and the effect of rings, beta (8.55, 23.35, 0.10,
0.45). Experimental data were fit to normal distributions (expressed as log
percentage transfer rate): hand-to-spigot transfer, normal ( - 0.80, 1.09);
spigot to hand, normal (0.36, 0.90). Soap with an antimicrobial agent (in
particular, CHG) was observed to be more effective than regular soap. Hot air
drying had the capacity to increase the amount of bacterial contamination on
hands, while paper towel drying caused a slight decrease in contamination.
There was little difference in the efficacy of alcohol and alcohol-free
sanitizers. Ring wearing caused a slight decrease in the efficacy of hand
washing. The experimental data validated the simulated combined effect of
certain hand washing procedures based on distributions derived from reported
studies. The conventional hand washing system caused a small increase in
contamination on hands vs. the touch-free system. Sensitivity analysis
revealed that the primary factors influencing final bacteria counts on the
hand were sanitizer, soap, and drying method. This research represents an
initial framework from which sound policy can be promulgated to control
bacterial transmission via hand contacts. |
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Status |
Published |
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Availability |
http://foodsci.rutgers.edu/schaffner/pdf%20files/Montville%20IJFM%202002.pdf |
Project group
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Institute |
Department of Food
Science, Rutgers University |
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Contact person |
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Partners |
Rebecca Montville, Yuhuan
Chen |