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Bacteria in a hospital nursery: laboratory and clinical studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 May 2009
Summary
Two hundred and twenty-two infants and fifty-one staff were examined for carriage of Staphylococcus pyogenes and Gram-negative bacilli, and the presence of these bacteria in the ward environment was also investigated. Staphylococci were phage-typed and tested for sensitivity to antibiotics. Assessment of clinical infection caused by these bacteria was made.
Infant carriage of Staphylococcus pyogenes was maximal on the sixth day, 73·1 % of umbilical swabs yielding significant growth. Carriage of Gram-negative bacilli was maximal on the fifth day, 31·7% of umbilical swabs being positive. Where special nursing was enforced, i.e. premature baby unit, isolation of Gram-negative bacilli was very infrequent.
The low nasal carriage of staphylococci seen in infants and nursing staff is attributed to traces of penicillinase-resistant penicillins in the ward air.
Staphylococcus pyogenes was recovered from 23 % of ward surfaces, and constituted 0·7% of the air-borne flora. In contrast, Gram-negative bacilli were recovered from 4·7 % of surfaces, and composed only 0·15% of the air-borne flora.
Phage group I constituted 73·0, 44·9 and 41·2% of strains from infants, staff and ward environment respectively.
Antibiograms were grouped into three categories, A, B and C. Category A (sensitive to chloramphenicol, erythromycin and methicillin but penicillin-resistant) composed 79·0% of infants' strains, being found mostly in group I, but was rare among staff strains.
Of 54 specimens taken from 40 infants showing evidence of infection, Staphylococcus pyogenes was isolated from 16, of which 14 were category A. Gram-negative bacilli were isolated 7 times. Only 21 infants required antibiotic therapy (9·3%) and none were infected with Gram-negative bacilli—this contrasts with the frequency of these bacilli in nursery infection today.
Ward air is considered to be the main depot of Staphylococcus pyogenes. Infant ‘dispersers’ are probably the principal source of the air-borne staphylococci. Infants and staff abstract from the air those staphylococci which become their colonizing strains. No transfer is thought to occur from the staff to the infants. Transmission of Gram-negative bacilli is similar in that the infants are the principal source and the air the main depot of these bacteria. Nasal colonization by Gram-negative bacilli is low, this is possibly due to poor colonizing properties. Infant umbilical carriage almost certainly results from endogenous faecal spread.
We are grateful to Dr J. C. Gould, Director, Central Microbiological Laboratories, Edinburgh, for his continued interest and advice, and to Mr J. C. Ferguson and Mrs M. M. Winton for skilled technical assistance. This study would not have been completed without the co-operation of Sisters McCartney and Struthers and their nursing staff.
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