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Surface Microbiology of Smartphone Screen Protectors Among Healthcare Professionals
by
Raza, Awais
, Razaa, Syed Ahmad
, Chi, Gerald
, Talib, Usama
, Sadar, Ahmad Bani
, Qureshi, Ahmad Uzair
, Raza, Ibrahim
in
Alcohol
/ Bacteria
/ Cellular telephones
/ Consent
/ Disease control
/ Disease prevention
/ Epidemiology/Public Health
/ Hospitals
/ Infectious Disease
/ Medical laboratories
/ Microbiology
/ Patients
/ Protected areas
/ Quality Improvement
/ Sample size
/ Smartphones
/ Staphylococcus infections
2017
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Surface Microbiology of Smartphone Screen Protectors Among Healthcare Professionals
by
Raza, Awais
, Razaa, Syed Ahmad
, Chi, Gerald
, Talib, Usama
, Sadar, Ahmad Bani
, Qureshi, Ahmad Uzair
, Raza, Ibrahim
in
Alcohol
/ Bacteria
/ Cellular telephones
/ Consent
/ Disease control
/ Disease prevention
/ Epidemiology/Public Health
/ Hospitals
/ Infectious Disease
/ Medical laboratories
/ Microbiology
/ Patients
/ Protected areas
/ Quality Improvement
/ Sample size
/ Smartphones
/ Staphylococcus infections
2017
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Surface Microbiology of Smartphone Screen Protectors Among Healthcare Professionals
by
Raza, Awais
, Razaa, Syed Ahmad
, Chi, Gerald
, Talib, Usama
, Sadar, Ahmad Bani
, Qureshi, Ahmad Uzair
, Raza, Ibrahim
in
Alcohol
/ Bacteria
/ Cellular telephones
/ Consent
/ Disease control
/ Disease prevention
/ Epidemiology/Public Health
/ Hospitals
/ Infectious Disease
/ Medical laboratories
/ Microbiology
/ Patients
/ Protected areas
/ Quality Improvement
/ Sample size
/ Smartphones
/ Staphylococcus infections
2017
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Surface Microbiology of Smartphone Screen Protectors Among Healthcare Professionals
Journal Article
Surface Microbiology of Smartphone Screen Protectors Among Healthcare Professionals
2017
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Overview
The use of smartphones with touch screens has become a norm for healthcare professionals (HCP). The risk of smart screen contamination has been proven, and guidelines are available to deal with possible contamination. A large number of smartphone users apply plastic or glass screen protectors onto their mobile phone screens to prevent scratches. However, these materials are not scratch proof, and their antipathogenic properties have not been studied.
We have conducted a study to determine the frequency of smartphone screen protector contamination and compared the data with contamination on the bare area on the same mobile screens. The sample size included only HCPs working in acute care settings and having at least eight hours of exposure time every day.
A total of 64 samples were collected, which reported 62.5% (n = 40/64) positive culture swabs from the protected areas of the screen and 45.3% (n = 29/64) from the unprotected area of the screen. Micrococcus and Gram-negative rods grew only on samples taken from the protected area whereas the bare area showed no such growth. There was no statistically significant difference in the frequency based on smart screen size, duration of use during duty hours, or the setting where it was used.
Smartphone screen protectors from healthcare providers may harbor pathogenic bacteria, especially in acute care settings. Coagulase-negative Staphylococci followed by Bacillus species were the most commonly yielded bacteria among house officers and postgraduate trainees in the present study.
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V,Cureus
Subject
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