Detection of microbial aerosols in hospital wards and molecular identification and dissemination of drug resistance of Escherichia coli.

This study examines the concentrations of aerobic bacteria and E. coli in ward environments and the airborne transmission of bacterial drug resistance. The results show that the three wards examined have an average aerobic bacterial concentration of 132 CFU∙m-3 and an average inhalable aerobic bacterial concentration of 73 CFU∙m-3, with no significant difference (P > 0.05) among the three wards. All isolated E. coli showed multi-drug resistance to not only third-generation cephalosporin antibiotics, but also quinolones, aminoglycosides, and sulfonamides. Furthermore, 51 airborne E. coli strains isolated from the air in the three wards and the corridor were screened for ESBLs, and 12 (23.53%) were ESBL-positive. The drug-resistance gene of the 12 ESBL-positive strains was mainly TEM gene, and the detection rate was 66.67% (8/12). According to a homology analysis with PFGE, 100% homologous E. coli from the ward at 5 m and 10 m outside the ward in the corridor shared the same drug-resistance spectrum, which further proves that airborne E. coli carrying a drug-resistance gene spreads out of the ward through gas exchange. This leads to biological pollution inside, outside, and around the ward, which poses a direct threat to the health of patients, healthcare workers, and surrounding residents. It is also the main reason for the antibiotic resistance in the hospital environment. More attention should be paid to comprehensive hygiene management in the surrounding enviro...
Source: Environment International - Category: Environmental Health Authors: Tags: Environ Int Source Type: research