• New Approach to Fighting Hospital Superbugs with Bacteria

Laboratory Products

New Approach to Fighting Hospital Superbugs with Bacteria

Dec 06 2011

Trials of a revolutionary, natural and cheap alternative to traditional hygiene practices is likely to spawn a completely new approach to the war against hospital superbugs. The startling results show that harmful bacteria can be completely eliminated by using ‘friendly’ bacteria in a simple cleaning fluid - rather than toxic chemicals.The trials,
carried out by UK-based hygiene specialists Chemex International, were unveiled recently at a conference of over 600 members of the Infection Protection Society in Bournemouth. Sean Derrig, Scientific Director of Chemex International, who presented the results at the Conference said: “Our research has proven that employing ‘friendly’ bacteria in a cleaning product rather than harsh chemicals drove out the bacteria that can be harmful to humans present at the start of the trial. The ‘bad’ bugs were completely eradicated - and the good ones did a very good job of eating dirt and grime as well. “The friendly bacteria chase out germs and form a protective biofilm that is tougher than Teflon and keeps the bad bacteria away permanently. The same principle is used in probiotic drinks that repopulate the gut with ‘good’ bacteria. It’s called competitive exclusion.

“This is a completely new approach to dealing with the pathogens that cause hospital-acquired infections. It is also simple, cheap and highly effective. “We have trialled this approach with a very forward-thinking NHS Trust and we saw more than just a visible improvement in cleanliness; scientific tests clearly demonstrated that harmful bacteria had been totally eliminated. “The ‘friendly’ bacteria are abundant in nature, the strain we use feeds on dirt and produces natural antibiotics which attack and kill the harmful bacteria. It really is using nature’s technology to clean wards and get rid of pathogens once and for all. Its high-level biocides are powerful enough to kill ‘difficult’ organisms such as Clostridium difficile spores and Norovirus against which traditional chemicals are ineffective and are in use in  multiple NHS Trusts and other situations where scrupulous hygiene is paramount.


Digital Edition

Lab Asia 31.2 April 2024

April 2024

In This Edition Chromatography Articles - Approaches to troubleshooting an SPE method for the analysis of oligonucleotides (pt i) - High-precision liquid flow processes demand full fluidic c...

View all digital editions

Events

Water Expo Nigeria 2024

May 21 2024 Lagos, Nigeria

Discovery Europe 2024

May 22 2024 Basel, Switzerland

NGVS 2024

May 23 2024 Beijing, China

Analiza

May 28 2024 Tel Aviv, Israel

View all events