Home

Home

Antimicrobial curtains

Klaus-Dieter Zastrow

by Dr. Klaus-Dieter Zastrow

Even hospital curtains could attract and harbour germs.

article image

Dr Klaus-Dieter Zastrow

In a recent study (Practical testing of antibacterially effective curtains and net curtains) Dr Klaus-Dieter Zastrow, director of the Institute for Hygiene and Environmental Medicine at Spandau Hospital, Berlin, compared the bacterial load in drapilux bioaktiv curtains containing antimicrobial properties, with the bacterial load in ordinary polyester curtains.

Four four-bed wards were fitted with curtains made of both materials; patients, nurses and lab staff did not know which had antimicrobial properties. Over a six-week period 288 samples from both types of curtain were gathered during normal care procedures on the wards, and the bacterial load was tested, focusing on bacteria that cause nosocomial infections. Drapilux bioaktiv showed a significant reduction of bacterial load - particularly with the highly problematic bacteria that cause nosocomial infections. Indeed, certain types of pathogens, e.g. Klebsiella pneumoniae, had been entirely eliminated.

article image
Silver ions, fixed on to the specially developed Trevira-CS fabric, ensure long-term antibacterial effects; they reduce bacteria on the textile surface efficiently and reliably, the manufacturer explained, adding that the antimicrobial properties are not lost when the textile is washed, and skin contact causes neither skin irritation nor allergies. ‘For decorative textiles not to become the source of infections it is recommended that fabrics offering antimicrobial properties are used to reduce the number of germs, particularly those that cause nosocomial infections. This is crucial, because there are no standards regarding the number of times hospital curtains should be washed,’ Dr Zastrow pointed out.

The study additionally suggested another practical advantage of antimicrobial curtains: a reduced bacterial load could reduce the washing frequency of the fabrics, providing substantial cost benefits.

Further details: Maniga Esmailpour - esmailpour@drapilux.com

This article was published on 07/01/2006

Search

 

Service

Company News

EH 6/08 as E-paper

Our latest issue of EUROPEAN HOSPITAL, EH 6/2008, is once again chock full of great articles, for example a feature on a Czech health spa located in the beautiful Carpathian Mountains and another management special on healthcare for Muslim patients across Europe. But Europe is not enough: you will get a first-hand assessment of RSNA 2008, the Annual Meeting of the Radiological Society of North America, which took place in Chicago, and we are presenting an ambitious project by US oncologists to provide access to advanced diagnostics and radiotherapy treatments in developing countries.