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Biofilm formation in an experimental water distribution system: the contamination of non-touch sensor taps and the implication for healthcare
Authors:Ginny Moore  David Stevenson  Katy-Anne Thompson  Simon Parks  Didier Ngabo  Allan M. Bennett
Affiliation:1. Biosafety Investigation Unit, Public Health England, Salisbury, UKginny.moore@phe.gov.uk;3. Biosafety Investigation Unit, Public Health England, Salisbury, UK
Abstract:Hospital tap water is a recognised source of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. UK guidance documents recommend measures to control/minimise the risk of P. aeruginosa in augmented care units but these are based on limited scientific evidence. An experimental water distribution system was designed to investigate colonisation of hospital tap components. P. aeruginosa was injected into 27 individual tap ‘assemblies’. Taps were subsequently flushed twice daily and contamination levels monitored over two years. Tap assemblies were systematically dismantled and assessed microbiologically and the effect of removing potentially contaminated components was determined. P. aeruginosa was repeatedly recovered from the tap water at levels above the augmented care alert level. The organism was recovered from all dismantled solenoid valves with colonisation of the ethylene propylene diene monomer (EPDM) diaphragm confirmed by microscopy. Removing the solenoid valves reduced P. aeruginosa counts in the water to below detectable levels. This effect was immediate and sustained, implicating the solenoid diaphragm as the primary contamination source.
Keywords:Pseudomonas aeruginosa  tap water contamination  non-touch sensor taps  biofilm  model water distribution system
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