๐ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus on hospital surfaces
Background. Health care workers continued to contract severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), even after barrier precautions were widely implemented. Methods. We explored the possible contribution of contaminated hospital surfaces to SARS transmission by swabbing surfaces in 2 hospitals and testing the swab samples by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and viral culture. Results. Twenty-six of 94 swab samples tested positive for viral RNA. Swab samples of respiratory secretions from each of the 4 patients examined tested positive by RT-PCR, as were 12 of 43 swabs from patient rooms and 10 of 47 swabs from other parts of the hospital, including the computer mouses at 2 nursing stations and the handrail of the public elevator. Specimens from areas with patients with SARS in the most infectious phase of illness (days 5-15 after onset) were more likely to be RNA positive than were swab specimens from elsewhere (24 of 63 samples vs. 2 of 31 samples; P = .001). All cultures showed no growth. Conclusions. Although the viruses identified may have been noninfectious, health care workers should be aware that SARS coronavirus can contaminate environmental surfaces in the hospital, and fomites should be considered to be a possible mode of transmission of SARS.
keywords
๐ severe acute (1373)
๐ polymerase chain (300)
๐ respiratory syndrome (2004)
๐ acute respiratory (1734)
๐ health care (123)
๐ chain reaction (303)
๐ transcriptase polymerase (48)
author
๐ค Dowell, Scott F.
๐ค Simmerman, James M.
๐ค Erdman, Dean D.
๐ค Wu, Jiunn Shyan Julian
๐ค Chaovavanich, Achara
๐ค Javadi, Massoud
๐ค Yang, Jyh Yuan
๐ค Anderson, Larry J.
๐ค Tong, Suxiang
๐ค Mei, Shang Ho
year
โฐ 2004
issn
๐ 10584838
volume
39
number
5
page
652-657
citedbycount
46
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