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DOUBLE GLOVES IN SURGICAL PROCEDURES STRONGLY RECOMMENDED
This is the result of an Indish study which observed the rate of perforation of the surgical gloves in single and double gloving. An alarming additional observation: 83,3% of glove perforations remain unnoticed!

Surgeons have the highest risk of contact with patients` blood and body fluids, and breaches in gloving material may expose operating room staff to risk of infections.

This prospective randomised study was done to assess the effectiveness of the practice of double gloving compared with single gloving in decreasing finger contamination during surgery. In 66 consecutive surgical procedures studied, preoperative skin abrasions were detected on the hands of 17.4% of the surgeons.

In the double gloving pattern, 32 glove perforations were observed, of which 22 were in the outer glove and 10 in the inner glove. Only four outer glove perforations had matching inner glove perforations, thus indicating that in 82% of cases when the outer glove is perforated the inner glove will protect the surgeon`s
hand from contamination.
The presence of visible skin contamination was also higher in perforation with the single gloving pattern (42.1%) than with the double gloving pattern (22.7%).

An overwhelming majority of glove perforations (83.3%) went unnoticed. Double gloving was accepted by the majority of surgeons, especially with repeated use.

It is recommended that double gloves are used routinely in all surgical procedures in view of the significantly higher protection it provides.

Source: S Thomasa, M Agarwala, G Mehtab (2001): Intraoperative glove perforation--single versus double gloving in protection against skin contamination. In: Postgrad Med J 2001;77:458-460



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Panorama
Clean Hands Save Horses - adapted to the WHO´s Clean Hands Save Lives initiative Even before the discovery of germs, the practice of hand hygiene had revealed itself as a crucial element in the fight against infectious diseases. In fact, supported by the historical discoveries and more recent evidence based data, the World Health Organization considers hand hygiene as the pillar of infection control, particularly when related to nosocomial infections. Therefore, the World Health Organization has a strong focus on “Clean Hands Save Lives” campaigns, a principle that is easily translatable into “Clean Hands Save Horses”.

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