Banishing long-sleeved coats is not going to help fight back the superbug invasion, says Lancet.
Recently the UK government had taken everyone by surprise with its far-reaching proposals to cleanse the hospitals of the superbugs. Ties and long-sleeved coats would be out, it warned, as they could be carriers of the dreaded germs.
On Sunday, Prime Minister Gordon Brown followed up with an announcement of a series of plans to "deep clean" hospitals ward-by-ward over the next year to return hospitals to the state they were in when they were built.But the prestigious Lancet has slammed the ideas as being populist. They are not backed by hard evidence, it said.
But The Lancet said a government working group had found no conclusive evidence that uniforms or other work clothes posed a significant hazard in terms of spreading infection.
And the focus should be on disinfection of high-touch surfaces rather than deep-cleaning wards to get rid of visible dirt, the journal said.
The editorial said: "Brown also plans to double the number of hospital matrons, to check on ward cleaning, and accost doctors wearing long sleeves.
"They would be better employed making sure doctors, nurses and visitors wash their hands properly, the proven way to stop hospital acquired infections," the editorial stated.
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He added: "The main route of transmission of MRSA is person-to-person contact and this will be affected little by deep cleaning.
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He said in addition to hand washing, other useful strategies would be screening patients for MRSA on admission, regular use of hydrogen peroxide vapour generators to kill bugs in the hospital environment and educating patients and visitors on ways they can reduce risk.
Chief Nursing Officer, Professor Christine Beasley said there was no single solution and the new proposals were part of a wider set of measures to reduce hospital-acquired infections.
She agreed that there was no evidence that uniforms themselves pose a significant risk of transmitting infections but said long sleeves and watches "get in the way of washing and decontaminating the hands, wrists and forearms".
"Clean and tidy hospitals and staff are very important to patients," she said.
"We make no apology for asking hospitals to take every reasonable measure to reduce infection and increase patient confidence that this is an issue the NHS is taking seriously."
Dr Mark Enright, an expert in molecular epidemiology at Imperial College, London said deep cleaning would be a waste of resources and an inconvenience to patients and staff.
"MRSA is a major problem in the UK because it is present, mostly unknowingly, in patients and staff.
"Interrupting the chain of transmission from these people to new hosts should be the main focus of infection control, not attempts at the sterilisation of floors and windows."
Source-Medindia
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