Effects of COVID-19 disinfection recommendations on microbial environment contamination: focus on emergency physicians’ stethoscopes and smartphones.

Effects of COVID-19 disinfection recommendations on microbial environment contamination: focus on emergency physicians’ stethoscopes and smartphones.

Publication date: Dec 17, 2025

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has considerably changed the game in the field of hygiene. The aim of the study was to compare microbiological colonization present on the emergency physicians’ stethoscopes and smartphones before and after the outbreak of COVID-19. This was a prospective cohort study in 1 academic hospitals’ emergency department. A microbiological analysis was conducted on the emergency doctors’ stethoscopes and smartphones for a month in 2018 and 2021. Analysis concerned stethoscopes diaphragms and the most used surface of the cellphones screen around to the main button. The authors used a solid growth medium irradiated Count-Tact(R) 3P agar (CT3P) (BioMerieux, Lyon, France) for collecting samples. Results were obtained after 5 days of growth at 30^0C to collect all the saprophytes environmental flora. A total of 27 doctors were included in 2018 and 30 doctors in 2021. Stethoscope diaphragm contamination was very high in both period with a geometric mean (GM) without difference before and after COVID respectively, GM = 68 colony-forming unit (cfu) per 25 cm^2 (95% CI: 50-94 cfu/25 cm^2) vs. 68 cfu/25 cm^2 (95% CI: 44-105 cfu/25 cm^2), p > 0. 05. Smartphones were cleaner than stethoscopes with a GM 0. 05. The study shows an urgent need to regularly inform of the hygiene of the medical tools and COVID-19 does not really bring improvements in the matter. Particularly in emergency department, where physicians examine several patients per day and can possibly transmit pathogens. Int J Occup Med Environ Health. 2025;38(6):611-20.

Concepts Keywords
Coronavirus bacterial contamination
Gm Betacoronavirus
Microbiological COVID-19
Smartphones COVID-19
Disinfection
disinfection
emergency department
Emergency Service, Hospital
Equipment Contamination
France
Humans
hygiene
Pandemics
Physicians
Prospective Studies
SARS-CoV-2
Smartphone
Stethoscopes

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH emergency
disease MESH included

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