Handheld Plasma Flashlight Rids Skin of Pathogens

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Handheld Plasma Flashlight Rids Skin of Pathogens

Dear Friends,

I agree with Eric- big implications, along with Janet's Sharklet forward (and the myriad of other antibacterial metallic compounds out there), make for a greater possibility of mitigating our losing fight with bacteria.  

Out in our neck of the woods, the Black Canyon Infectious Disease Forecasting Station has produced hundreds of forecast libraries for our pathogen-antibiotic resistance pairs.  How we use this information is to forecast 5 to 10 years out where the current trends of antimicrobial resistance is taking us.  Those of us who are Trekkies call the process "frequency-modulated shielding for the hospital".  What is interesting is our patterns are highly local-specific.  Meaning, if you use standard antibiotic references in the clinic such as the Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy, you would be grossly misled in terms of what antibiotics are effective against, say, Pseudomonas.  Most physicians do not use local antibiograms, and we are the first (to our knowledge) to incorporate forecasting in the decision process of what antibiotics to allow for use in the hospital.  

Couple this to better technology to facilitate decreased fomite / hand / inanimate surface-based transmission, and you have some powerful defenses.

BUT- here's the bad news.  After dealing with the worst RSV season ever documented at our hospital, we noted horrendous variance and ignorance when it came to infection control.  We saw many a nurse walk right into an RSV-positive child's room without gown / gloves / mask, use their own stethoscope (the same one used for multiple patients), and walk right out without washing hands.  And this was in the midst of them seeing us intubate and transfer kids who had crashed on the floor, several of whom were coinfected with Hemophilus influenzae (!)  In other words, bad human behavior trumps technology more often than we like, even when reminded repeatedly of the proper procedures… 

Personally I favor dog shock collars, but I digress…

If it takes 5 min to achieve adequate sterilization of hands, it may be too much time for your average healthcare provider given IF they use hand sanitizer, it is applied within seconds.  One thought I DO like is the notion of connecting the technology to a timer / alarm so that if the patient does not hear the alarm go off, they know their provider is being unsafe with them…
Cheers,Jim

James M. Wilson V, M.D.

Delta Pediatrics

Delta County Memorial Hospital-and-Chief of Station

Ascel Bio Black Canyon Infectious Disease Forecast Station #1

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