[ + Watch Now + ]

Mobile Security Industry News

TMCNet:  Robotic Vaporizers Reduce Hospital-Borne Infections

[January 03, 2013]

Robotic Vaporizers Reduce Hospital-Borne Infections

Jan 03, 2013 (Voice of America News/ContentWorks via COMTEX) -- Robotic Vaporizers Reduce Hospital-Borne Infections Jessica Berman January 3, 2013 It's a growing problem for hospitals around the world: strains of deadly, drug-resistant bacteria contaminating operating and recovery rooms. To combat this serious threat to patient health, two dozen U.S. hospitals are now using robotic, hydrogen-peroxide vaporizers to sanitize rooms where infected patients have stayed. A new study finds that use of the vaporizers' germ-killing mist has significantly lowered the number of hospital-borne infections.


Hospitals can be a haven for many types of dangerous, antibiotic-resistant bacteria, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA. The microbes can survive on hard surfaces long after an infected patient has been discharged.

Traditional hand-cleaning and mopping of individual rooms between patients, using simple anti-bacterial cleansers, often leave some microbes behind, according to Trish Perl, a professor of medicine at The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.

"There are very complicated surfaces with equipment and little nooks and crannies that are hard to clean. They (the cleaning staff) are given a short period of time to clean rooms and they simply can't physically get everything clean before the room turns over," Perl said.

So, researchers led by Perl conducted the first comprehensive study to see if they could reduce the risk of transmitting antibiotic-resistant organisms. They compared traditional disinfecting methods to standard cleaning, adding the disinfecting robots.

Perl says the mobile vaporizers resemble R2D2 -- the little dome-topped robot in the Star War movies -- with a spray nozzle on top.

"And it spins around the room. So it turns its head 360 degrees," Perl said.

The nozzle emits a fine mist of hydrogen peroxide, a powerful antibacterial bleaching agent. Because the bleach can be toxic to humans if ingested or inhaled, a second vaporizing robot is wheeled into a room to spray a solution that breaks down the hydrogen peroxide into harmless water and oxygen molecules, according to Perl.

"It doesn't destroy hospital surfaces, including equipment surfaces - things like computers and all this technological stuff you find in buildings," Perl said.

Hopkins researchers closely monitored some 6,300 patients who stayed in 180 private rooms over a 2 1/2 year period. Half of the rooms were disinfected only by hand, while the other half were also treated with the robotic vaporizers.

In the end, 21 percent of the rooms harbored drug-resistant organisms, most of them not sanitized by the robots, while the hydrogen peroxide-vaporizing machines reduced by 64 percent the number of patients who later contracted a hospital-borne infection. They also lowered the risk of infection with drug-resistant enterococci by 80 percent.

The twin robots are expensive. Together, they cost about $40,000. Perl says she hopes that Bioquell, the U.S. manufacturer, can bring down that price eventually so the devices will be more affordable to hospitals in developing countries.

The sanitizing machines were first used in several Singapore hospitals in 2002 during the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS.

An article on the effectiveness of vapor-dispensing robots in controlling hospital infections is published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

[ Back To Mobile Security Homepage's Homepage ]

Follow Us

  • Mobile Security - LinkedIn
  • Mobile Security - Youtube
  • Mobile Security - Facebook
  • Mobile Security - Twitter
  • Mobile Security - RSS Feed

Request a Demo

Weekly Demonstration: SAP Mobile Secure
Solution including SAP Afaria Cloud

Free 30-day Trial

Best MDM in the cloud. Best MDM
Analytics. Best MDM price.

Featured Whitepapers

What Is Your Mobile Content Policy? A Checklist for Content Risk Mitigation
We are living in a world that only 20 years ago was the realm of science fiction. Devices once just barely imaginable have become common consumer items, carried casually in pockets and purses, with constantly growing capabilities.

SAP Enterprise Mobility: Bringing a Cohesive Approach to a Complex Market
Mobility and consumerization are creating complexity in the enterprise, but embracing the change can lead to more productive mobile workers as well as better communications with employees, partners, customers, and consumers. The trends in the enterprise mobility landscape drive a need for technology solutions to emerge.

Featured Datasheets

Securing Enterprise Mobility for Greater Competitive Advantage
We are living in a world that only 20 years ago was the realm of science fiction. Devices once just barely imaginable have become common consumer items, carried casually in pockets and purses, with constantly growing capabilities.

Secure Mobile Content Management for the Enterprise
Every day employees move business files onto their mobile devices so they can work at home, on the road, or at client sites. The mobile workforce is a reality, as 80% of employees say they need to access work documents from outside the office.1 Instead of insecure, consumer-based tools, enterprises need a safe, reliable platform for managing content on mobile devices.

Featured Webinar

Mobile Security - Mobile Drives Field Service Productivity at Satellites Unlimited

Mobile Drives Field Service Productivity at Satellites Unlimited
Field service has never been more competitive or faster changing than it is today. Going mobile is a must to stay ahead of the competition, provide improved services, and keep up with ever-increasing customer expectations.

Featured Webcast

Mobile Security - End to End Mobility Requirements: IDC and SAP explore the 3rd Platform

End to End Mobility Requirements: IDC and SAP explore the 3rd Platform
A new IDC study states that we're in the midst of a shift that takes place once every 20 - 25 years - introducing a new technology platform that will inspire growth and innovation for enterprises of all sizes. IDC calls it the 3rd Platform - built on mobile devices and apps, cloud services, mobile broadband networks, "Big Data", analytics, and social technologies.

Featured On-Demand Webinar

Mobile Security - Analyst Webcast: Secure Content Management in a Mobile Age

Analyst Webcast: Secure Content Management in a Mobile Age
Securing and managing content is taking on new importance as organizations try to cope with the explosion of business-oriented file sharing services while at the same time taking advantage of the proliferation of "smart" mobile devices.

Featured Infographics

Featured Press Releases