- 10 Strategies to Overcome Insomnia
- Could Artificial Sweeteners Be Aging the Brain Faster?
- Techniques for Soothing Your Nervous System
- Does the Water in Your House Smell Funny? Here’s Why
- Can a Daily Dose of Apple Cider Vinegar Actually Aid Weight Loss?
- 6 Health Beverages That Can Actually Spike Your Blood Sugar
- Treatment Options for Social Anxiety Disorder
- Understanding the Connection Between Anxiety and Depression
- How Daily Prunes Can Influence Cholesterol and Inflammation
- When to Take B12 for Better Absorption and Energy
Medical Gowns, Gloves Often Source of Contamination: Study
Health care workers often contaminate their skin and clothing when they remove their medical gowns and gloves, new research suggests.
For the study, workers at four Ohio hospitals simulated gown and glove removal. Additional health care workers from a separate facility participated in a program that included education and practice of removing contaminated gowns and gloves.
The health care workers simulated 435 gown and glove removals. The researchers used a fluorescent lotion to determine “contamination.” Skin or clothing got contaminated 46 percent of the time, the investigators found.
But, the education and practice program led to a significant drop in the contamination rate — from 60 percent to about 19 percent, the findings showed.
This improvement lasted even when health care workers were retested after one and three months, Dr. Curtis Donskey, of the Cleveland Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and colleagues reported in the study published in the Oct. 12 issue of JAMA Internal Medicine.
The study findings highlight the urgent need to come up with ways to reduce the risk of contamination, Donskey said in a journal news release.
It’s also important to figure out better ways to train people in how to best remove these items, Donskey’s team said. And, ideally, the design of protective clothing should be improved to reduce the risk of contamination, the study authors suggested.
More information
The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about job safety for health care workers.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2026 HealthDay. All rights reserved.










