Publication date: Jun 16, 2025
During the COVID-19 pandemic, long-sleeved gowns were advocated as personal protective equipment for healthcare workers (HCW). The purpose of gowns is preventing transmission of infectious agents via the uniform or arms during contact with patients and their surroundings. Gowns, however, entail a substantial burden; in costs, workload for HCW, and generated waste. Our objective is to evaluate the current knowledge regarding the use of gowns during care of patients with COVID-19 and other respiratory viruses to prevent nosocomial transmission. We used the PRISMA guidelines and searched five databases (Medline, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane, Google Scholar) until April 11th, 2023. The search identified 2667 potentially relevant studies, of which 30 were selected and divided into four categories. In 12 studies, contamination rates of gowns ranged from 0% to 77. 5% (median = 1. 43%). Three out of seven studies showed that virus remained infectious the longest on Tyvek coveralls and plastic gowns, and the shortest on cotton and polyester. Two out of seven studies found a protective effect between HCW protective clothing and infection of HCW. Finally, three out of four studies concluded that short-sleeves, cotton gowns or no gowns provided the same level of protection as standard gowns. The results show viral RNA can be found on clothing, but it is unclear if viruses are transmitted to HCW and/or patients. Evidence for the protective effect of long-sleeved gowns over alternatives is still insufficient. Therefore, well-controlled and adequately powered laboratory transmission experiments that simulate real-life conditions are necessary.
Concepts | Keywords |
---|---|
COVID-19 | |
Healthcare | Disease Transmission |
Shortest | Gowns |
Viruses | Human |
Infectious | |
Influenza | |
Pneumonia | |
Respiratory Tract Infections | |
SARS-CoV-2 | |
Surgical Attire | |
Viral |
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | IDO | role |
disease | MESH | COVID-19 pandemic |
disease | MESH | infection |
disease | MESH | Influenza |
disease | MESH | Pneumonia |
disease | MESH | Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections |
disease | MESH | Respiratory Tract Infections |