Nasal and Hand Carriage ofStaphylococcus aureusin Staff at a Department for Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery: Endogenous or Exogenous Source?

Abstract
Objective: To investigate the rates ofStaphylococcus aureuscarriage on the hands and in the noses of healthcare workers (HCWs) and the relatedness ofS. aureusisolates found in the two sites.Design: Point-prevalence study.Setting: Department for Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery at the University Hospital of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden.Subjects and Methods: Samples were obtained from 133 individuals, 18 men and 115 women, using imprints of each hand on blood agar and a swab from the nose.S. aureusisolates were identified by standard methods and typed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis.Results: S. aureuswas found on the hands of 16.7% of the men and 9.6% of the women, and in the noses of 33.3% of the men and 17.4% of the women. The risk ratio forS. aureuscarriage on the hands with nasal carriage was 7.4 (95% confidence interval, 2.7 to 20.2;P< .001). Among the 14 HCWs carryingS. aureuson their hands, strain likeness to the nasal isolate was documented for 7 (50%).Conclusions: Half of the HCWs acquiredS. aureuson the hands from patients or the environment and half did so by apparent self-inoculation from the nose. Regardless of the source of contamination, good compliance with hand hygiene is needed from all HCWs to protect patients from nosocomial infections. The moderate rate ofS. aureuscarriage on hands in this setting could be the result of the routine use of alcoholic hand antisepsis.

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