학술논문

Antibiogram of bacteria isolated from automated teller machines in Hamadan, West Iran
Document Type
article
Source
GMS Hygiene and Infection Control, Vol 12, p Doc03 (2017)
Subject
automated teller machines
bacteria
keyboard
antibiotic pattern
Medicine
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Microbiology
QR1-502
Language
German
English
ISSN
2196-5226
Abstract
Aim: Bacteria are ubiquitous in the environment. In keeping with the continued expansion of urbanization and the growing population, an increasing number of people use automated banking, i.e. automated teller machines (ATMs). The aim of this study was to investigate the bacterial contamination and its antibiotic sensitivity on computer keyboards located at ATMs in Hamadan province, Iran. Method: Out of 360 ATMs at four locations in Hamadan, 96 were randomly selected for this study. The antibiotic susceptibility pattern of all isolates was determined by the agar disk diffusion method using gentamicin (10 µg), vancomycin (30 µg), trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (25 µg), amikacin (30 µg), tobramycin (10 µg), cephalotin (30 µg), norfloxacin (5 µg), and ceftizoxim (30 µg) disks. Results: Melli and Saderat Banks had the most frequently contaminated ATMS, with 18 (27.7%) and 12 (18.5%), respectively. The most frequently isolated bacteria were in 12 (18.5%) ATMs, in in 11 (16.9%), in 6 (9.2%), spp. in 8 (12.3%), spp. in 2 (3.1%), in 6 (9.2%), in 3 (4.6%), and spp. in 5 (7.69%) cases. All isolated bacteria were susceptible to gentamicin, cephalotin, tobramycin, amikacin, norfloxacin, and vancomycin. The resistance rate to trimethoprim/sulfamole was 50%. Conclusion: All tested ATM keyboards were contaminated with at least one species of bacteria. Based on these findings, it is recommendable to disinfect the hands after entering one’s own apartment, work area or a hospital, in order to hinder the spread of critical pathogens in the personal environment or in the hospital.