Killing of Fabric-Associated Bacteria in Hospital Laundry by Low-Temperature Washing
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Infectious Diseases
- Vol. 149 (1) , 48-57
- https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/149.1.48
Abstract
Hospitals using 71.1 C water for laundering consume vast amounts of energy. We studied whether washing at 22 C would result in fabric-associated bacterial counts significantly different from those remaining after the high-temperature wash procedure in general use. Using a standard method to enumerate fabric-associated bacteria, we found that soiled sheets and terry cloth items were contaminated, respectively, with 106 and 108 cfu/l00 cm2 of fabric area, predominantly gram-negative rods (especially Enterobacteriaceae and Pseudomonadaceae). Staphylococcus species were the most common gram-positive organisms. A standard low-temperature washing cycle without laundry chemicals removed 3 log10 of bacteria by agitation, dilution, and drainage. When low-temperature laundry chemicals were used, 3 1og10 of bacteria were killed after the bleach was added, and sheets and terry cloth items had postwash colony counts of 101–102 cfu/100 cm2. Drying removed an additional 1–2 log10 organisms. Bacterial counts and species from low- and high-temperature washed fabrics were comparable. Low-temperature washing is therefore as effective as high-temperature washing for eliminating pathogenic bacteria from hospital laundry.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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