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Microbial Air Quality in Healthcare Facilities

Lucia Bonadonna, Rossella Briancesco, Anna Maria Coccia, Pierluigi Meloni, Giuseppina La Rosa, Umberto Moscato

2021International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There is increasing evidence that indoor air quality and contaminated surfaces provide an important potential source for transmission of pathogens in hospitals. Airborne hospital microorganisms are apparently harmless to healthy people. Nevertheless, healthcare settings are characterized by different environmental critical conditions and high infective risk, mainly due to the compromised immunologic conditions of the patients that make them more vulnerable to infections. Thus, spread, survival and persistence of microbial communities are important factors in hospital environments affecting health of inpatients as well as of medical and nursing staff. In this paper, airborne and aerosolized microorganisms and their presence in hospital environments are taken into consideration, and the factors that collectively contribute to defining the infection risk in these facilities are illustrated.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental healthHealth careMedicineAirborne transmissionTransmission (telecommunications)Air quality indexMedical emergencyIntensive care medicineDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)EcologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)BiologyPathologyEconomic growthEngineeringEconomicsElectrical engineeringInfection Control and VentilationIndoor Air Quality and Microbial Exposure
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