How many patients have you used your stethoscope on today? How many hands have touched that pen you’re about to hand to your next patient? While stethoscopes and pens are essential items in every hospital, they’re often over looked as potential vectors of bacteria. Studies show that these two items are notorious nosocomials – spreading bacteria and germs no matter how compliant you are with handwashing and hand sanitizer use.
Did you know that the average pen will have 8 owners, each with multiple users, during its lifetime? And while most clinicians acknowledge that stethoscopes can pass germs from one patient to the next, most don’t regularly disinfect their stethoscopes.2 In a nutshell, if you’re not disinfecting pens and stethoscopes regularly, you’re making it easier for germs to travel from room to room and patient to patient, not to mention making it a lot harder to fight HAIs. What to Do A Pricey Option An Inconvenient Option The Cost-Effective, Convenient Option By simply housing your pen or stethoscope in their anti-microbial ports, they’re sanitized every time they’re used. Automatically. |
Stats on HAIs1
Stats on Stethoscopes
Stats on Pens
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Sources 1Centers for Disease Control. The Direct Medical Costs of Healthcare-Associated Infections in U.S. Hospitals and the Benefits of Prevention. 2 The Journal of Physician Assistant Education. Contamination Level of Stethoscopes Used By Physicians and Physician Assistants. 3 American Journal of Infection Control. Predictors of Stethoscope Disinfection Among Pediatric Health Care Providers. 4 Online Journal of Health & Allied Sciences. Pen of Health Care Worker as Vector of Infection. 5 Clinical Microbiology and Infection. Bacterial Colonization on Writing Pens Touched by Healthcare Professionals and Hospitalized Patients with and Without Cleaning the Pen with Alcohol-Based Hand Sanitizing Agent. |