MICROBIAL FLORA OF NURSES' HANDS

Abstract
The hands of 50 nurses and 50 controls were tested for coagulase-positive staphylococcus. Twenty-eight percent of both groups were carriers. The mean staphylococcal count on the palm of the hand was 13.7 per 16 cm2 in nurses as compared to 442.7 per 16 cm2 in the control group. The number of persistent carriers was the same for each group, but 25% of all cultures from nurses were positive for Staphylococcus aureus as compared to 14.2% of the cultures from the control group. It was concluded that there was no direct correlation between high staphylococcal counts and persistence of carriage. The skin as a site of carriage of Staphylococcus aureus was found to be of greater importance in nurses than in control subjects.