Skip to main content

Antibiotic resistant airborne bacteria and their multidrug resistance pattern at University teaching referral Hospital in South Ethiopia

Abstract

Background

Hospitals provide a reservoir of microorganisms, many of which are multi-resistant to antibiotics. Emergence of multi-drug resistant strains in a hospital environment, particularly in developing countries is an increasing problem to infection treatment. This study aims at assessing antibiotic resistant airborne bacterial isolates.

Methods

A cross-sectional study was conducted at Wolaita Sodo university teaching and referral Hospital. Indoor air samples were collected by using passive air sampling method. Sample processing and antimicrobial susceptibility testing were done following standard bacteriological techniques. The data was analyzed using SPSS version 20.

Results

Medically important bacterial pathogens, Coagulase negative staphylococci (29.6%), Staphylococcus aureus (26.3%), Enterococci species, Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium (16.5%), Acinetobacter species (9.5%), Escherichia coli (5.8%) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (5.3%) were isolated. Antibiotic resistance rate ranging from 7.5 to 87.5% was detected for all isolates. Acinetobacter species showed a high rate of resistance for trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, gentamicin (78.2%) and ciprofloxacin (82.6%), 28 (38.9%) of S. aureus isolates were meticillin resistant, and 7.5% Enterococci isolates of were vancomycin resistant. 75.3% of all bacterial pathogen were multi-drug resistant. Among them, 74.6% were gram positive and 84% were gram negative. Multi-drug resistance were observed among 84.6% of P. aeruginosa, of 82.5% Enterococcii, E. coli 78.6%, S. aureus 76.6%, and Coagulase negative staphylococci of 73.6%.

Conclusions

Indoor environment of the hospital was contaminated with airborne microbiotas, which are common cause of post-surgical site infection in the study area. Bacterial isolates were highly resistant to commonly used antibiotics with high multi-drug resistance percentage. So air quality of hospital environment, in restricted settings deserves attention, and requires long-term surveillance to protect both patients and healthcare workers.

Background

Hospital environment plays a significant role in the occurrence of nosocomial infection since it harbors a diverse population of microorganisms [1]. Bacterial pathogens of medical importance like Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Enterococci, Acinetobacter spp. and Coagulase-negative staphylococci are a common cause of healthcare-associated infection which could able to survive and persist for long period of time in the hospital environment and have resistant disinfectants potential. The persistence ability of bacterial pathogens in hospital environment associated with a background rise in various types of nosocomial infections and could reach the sick patients through sources like air [2,3,4,5].

Operation theatre, delivery room, and intensive care unit are settings where patients are at a greater risk than the outside environment and could be polluted with bacterial pathogens released into it from various sources [6]. Environmental surface reservoirs like floors, the number of visitors, extent of indoor traffic, time of day and the number of materials brought in from outside and antibiotic resistance aggravate the extent of air bacterial microbiota [7, 8]. The uncontrolled movement of air in and out of the hospital environment makes the bacterial persistence worse since these infectious microorganisms may spread easily into the environment through sneezing, coughing, talking and contact with hospital materials. It can affect not only patients admitted to rooms in which the prior occupants tested positive for a pathogen but also other patients in the facility and even patients in other facilities in a network [9].

Hospitals provide a reservoir of microorganisms, many of which are multi-resistant to antibiotics. The emergence of resistance to antimicrobial agents is a global public health problem particularly in pathogens causing nosocomial infections which contributed to the morbidity, mortality, increased health care costs resulting from treatment failures, and longer hospital stays [1, 10].

The emergence of multi-drug resistant (MDR) strains in a hospital environment, particularly in developing countries is an increasing infection control problem presented a challenge in the provision of good quality patient care associated with high frequency of hospital acquired infections of which emergence, and reemergence of difficult-to-treat nosocomial infections in patients with increased antibiotic resistance rate [11, 12].

Frequently encountered MDR bacteria, methicillin-resistant S. aureus, cephalosporins, and extended spectrum beta-lactamase producing Enterobacteriaceae, ceftazidime-resistant P. aeruginosa, Imipenem-resistant A. baumannii and vancomycin-resistant Enterococci are commonly encountered in the hospital environment [13,14,15].

Post surgical site infection, urinary tract infection and respiratory infection are the common hospital acquired infection in this study area of which air could be the potential source. The susceptibility pattern of the isolates to commonly used antibiotics in this area will also provide enormous options for clinicians to select appropriate antibiotics for empirical therapy. So this study aims at the isolation and antibiotic susceptibility pattern of potentially pathogenic airborne bacteria in restricted settings of the hospital setup.

Study area

The study was conducted at Wolaita Sodo University teaching and referral Hospital (WSUTRH), Sodo, located South Central Ethiopia. It’s serving people in catchment’s area of 2 million people. The hospital has 320 beds for inpatient service which are on medical, pediatrics, surgical, gynecology and obstetrics ward.

Study design

The Hospital-based cross-sectional study design was conducted in WSUTRH from November 2015–March 2015.

Sample size

Sample number were determined in convenience in which 72 settle plate samples were collected in each ward (Delivery room, operation theater, and intensive care unit) for continuous 3 months which gives a total sample size of 216 airborne samples.

Sampling techniques

The air samples were collected from November 1–March 30, 2015 (1st week of the months) once a week during Monday’s since the patient load is higher in the study area. The air samples were collected in a day considering the most representative hours (at 8–9 AM, at 11 AM–12 PM, 4–5 PM) after a preliminary survey by considering the fact that a higher patient, staff and attendee load could become the highest burden for acquiring infection through air way. Indoor air samples were collected from delivery room, intensive care unit and operation theatre. Settle plate or passive air sampling method was used. A nine cm diameter sterile Petri dish with 20 ml tryptic soy agar (TSA) was left open to the air for an hour, a meter above the floor and a meter from the wall [16]. Self-contamination was prevented by wearing sterile surgical gloves, mouth masks, and protective gown. Petri-plates were labeled with sample number, hospital ward, date and time of sample collection. Two agar plates were placed at each of the selected wards with 5 m apart. Soon after collection; samples were transported to the microbiology laboratory in sealed plastic bags.

Processing of specimens and preliminary identification

Following collection, 3–5 colonies on TSA were inoculated into MacConkey agar, blood agar plates 5% (BAP), brain heart infusion agar, Mannitol salt agar (Oxoid, LTD), and Bile-aesculin-azide agar (BEAA) (Biomerieux, France) selective medium. The inoculated agar plate was incubated at 35 °C for 24–48 h. Then the growth was inspected to identify the bacteria. Microbial growth on the agar media was identified by colonial morphology, Gram staining, and biochemical tests, oxidase, catalase, coagulase, citrate, indole test, growth in 6.5% NaCl and turbidity, voges-prosquaer, hippurate hydrolysis, pigment production and mannitol fermentation. Isolates were determined and characterized based on Bergy manual of determinative bacteriology [17].

Antibiotic susceptibility testing

Susceptibility testing was performed on isolates based on the Kirby–Bauer diffusion technique [18]. The grades of susceptibility pattern were recognized as sensitive, intermediate and resistant by comparison of the zone of inhibition as indicated in Clinical lab science institute [19] standard 2014. The antibiotics tested for both gram negative and gram positive bacteria (Oxoid, Basingtone, UK) were amikacin (30 μg), ampicillin (10 μg), amoxicillin (25 μg), amoxicillin-clavulanic acid (30 μg), cefoxitin (30 μg), ceftazidime (30 μg), ceftriaxone (30 μg), chloramphenicol (30 μg), ciprofloxacin (5 µg), clindamycin (2 µg), doxycycline (30 μg), erythromycin (15 µg), gentamicin (10 μg), imipenem (10 μg), norfloxacin (10 μg), penicillin G (10 units), tetracycline (30 μg), trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole (25 μg), and vancomycin (30 µg). Antibiotics were selected based on local availability, literature, effectiveness and CLSI Guidelines.

MDR was defined as acquired non-susceptibility to at least one agent in three or more antimicrobial categories [20].

Pan resistance-Resistance for all antibiotics tested.

Quality controls

Standard operating procedures were prepared and followed from sample collection to reporting. Culture medias was prepared based on the manufactures instruction then the sterility of culture media was checked by incubating 5% of the batch at 35–37 °C overnight and observing bacterial growth. Those culture medias which showed growth were discarded. Antibiotic discs potency was checked by using S. aureus ATCC25923, E. coli ATCC 25922 and P. aeruginosa ATCC 27853 strains as control organisms.

Data analysis

Statistical analysis was performed by using SPSS version 20 software program and descriptive statistics were used.

Ethical considerations

The proposal was approved by the ethical review committee of Wolaita Sodo University. An official letter was written from the university to WSUTRH administrator. The result of the study was communicated to the responsible bodies for any beneficiary or corrective measures.

Results

Total numbers of 216 air samples were collected from delivery room (DR), intensive care unit (ICU), and operation theatre (OT). 195 (90.2%) settle plates were showed a positive bacterial growth for any one of the bacteria. Significant proportions of bacterial pathogens of nosocomial importance like Coagulase negative staphylococci, S. aureus, Enterococci spp., E. fecalis, 72.5% and E. faecium, 27.5%, Acinetobacter spp., E. coli, and P. aeruginosa were also detected. CoNS (72/243) were the highest prevalent bacteria in three wards followed by S. aureus 45.8% (64/243). Coagulase negative staphylococci 37.8% were the most accountable bacteria in the delivery room followed by S. aureus 42.2% (27/64). On the other hand, S. aureus was the most abundant bacteria identified in the OR 27/59 (45.85). CoNS and S. aureus was the most isolated bacteria in the ICU Fig. 1.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Distribution of airborne bacterial pathogens in wards of WSUTRH, November–March 2015. DR delivery room, ICU intensive care unit, OR operation theater

Antibiotic resistance rate of air-borne bacterial pathogens

Antibiotic resistance range of 7.5 up to 87.5% was detected among gram-positive isolates of which CoNS showed a high level of resistance for chloramphenicol 68.1% and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 66.7%. S. aureus isolates depicted 87.5% resistance to chloramphenicol and 28 (38.9%) were MRSA isolates. Enterococci spp. showed resistant for trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 77.5% and ampicillin, 70%. Eight isolates in this study were vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE).

Gram-negative bacterial isolates showed resistance ranging from 15.4–87% of which Acinetobacter spp. showed a high rate of resistance (>65%) for all antibiotics tested. Ampicillin and doxycycline resistant E. coli isolates 71.4 and 78.6% respectively were identified. Imipenem, ceftazidime, and ciprofloxacin resistance P. aeruginosa isolates with the rate of resistance, 38.5, 23.1, and 76.9% were also isolated respectively (Table 1).

Table 1 Antimicrobial resistance pattern of airborne bacterial pathogens of nosocomial importance in WSUTRH, November–March 2015

MDR pattern of gram-positive airborne bacterial pathogens

Seventy-five percent of all bacterial pathogens were multi-drug resistant (MDR) of which 74.6% were gram positive and 84% were gram negative. Enterococci spp. accounts 82.5% MDR prevalence of which three isolates were pan-resistant and seven isolates were resistant for three antibiotics (chloramphenicol + gentamicin + trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Seventy-three (73.6%) CoNS became MDR of which two isolates depicted pan-resistance. S. aureus isolates showed the very high level of MDR rate, 76.6% (Table 2).

Table 2 Multi drug resistant pattern of airborne gram positive bacterial isolates in WSUTRH November–March 2015

MDR pattern of gram-negative airborne bacterial pathogens

Overall MDR rate of gram negative bacteria were 84%. The vast majorities (91.3%) of Acinetobacter spp. were MDR with two pan-resistant isolates and 84.6% of the isolates, four pan-resistances, were MDR. Eighty percent of E. coli isolates were having multi-drug resistance of which 11.1% of the isolates depicted MDR pattern of ampicillin + amoxicillin-clavulanic acid + cephalothin + ciprofloxacin + trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole) (Table 3).

Table 3 Multi-drug resistance pattern of airborne gram negative bacterial pathogens in WSUTRH from November–March 2015

Discussion

CoNS, and S. aureus, identified in this study is in line with previous findings conducted in, Ethiopia [21, 22], Nigeria [23], Kashmir [24], Nepal [25], and Iran [26]. CoNS and S. aureus were the predominant bacterial isolates in all setups in this study which could be associated with their ability to persist and resist the harsh environmental condition and to suspend in the air particles [9]. S. aureus, was the most prevalent bacteria in the air of operation theatre. This finding is corroborated with findings done previously which has the same [21,22,23, 26]. This might be because of its survival ability on the environmental surface, ability to resist disinfection and could also have an association with the fact that S. aureus was the main cause of post-surgical site infection in this hospital.

Enterococci spp. (E. fecalis and E. faecium) reported in this study were also identified in previous studies isolated elsewhere in Nigeria [23] and Iran [27]. Whereas Acinetobacter spp. 9.3% was the most common gram-negative bacteria in this study which could be supported by its higher survival ability (3 days to 11 months) in the environment. Our finding couldn’t be compared with other airborne studies in Ethiopia since it is not reported even though these bacteria were reported elsewhere, Taiwan 13.4% [28] and Iran 42% [26] in restrict settings like ICU and OT. Enterococci and Acinetobacter spp. did not reported previously from air studies in Ethiopia. This could possibly be due to many reasons, the investigator’s attention to these pathogens, requirement of high sterility aseptic techniques with enriched bacterial media (selective) and reporting of these bacteria in family name (streptococci) rather than species name.

The isolation percentage of E. coli (7.5%) in this study is lower as compared with the 13.5% detected in Khartoum [29] hospital and 15.2% reported in Taiwan hospital [28]. This could be due to the use of active air sampling in Taiwan hospital and difference in ward and number of patients attended in reference to Khartoum hospital as compared and E. coli is one of the commonest causes of urinary tract infections, 35% prevalence in the study setting where E. coli accounts 31.4%, and is commonly present in appendix abscess, peritonitis, cholecystitis, septic wounds and bedsores, bacteraemia and endotoxic shock, particularly in surgical or otherwise debilitated patients [30].

Pseudomonas aeruginosa prevalence (5.3%) in this study is relatively comparable with other similar study in North Ethiopia [22] but much less than 28% [31] and 52% [10] reported previously which could be due to the difference in methodology, sampling place or magnitude of nosocomial infection in specific localities. P. aeruginosa associated infection is a recognized public health threat often acquired from the hospital environment and contaminated medical devices. It is not only an important cause of morbidity but also increases the stay of the patient in the hospital and increases the cost of treatment [32].

Indoor air quality in a hospital environment is of great concern to patients, attendants, and clinical staff which could be a cause for nosocomial infections and outbreak. High level of airborne bacteria in the hospital is an alarming call since these settings are places where actual surgical procedures, severely sick, and post-surgical rehabilitated patients are admitted and delivery services are handled.

Antibiotic resistant infections add considerable and avoidable costs to the health care system of which it adds 20 billion USD in excess direct health care cost with additional costs to low society of productivity as high as 35 billion USD [33].

Thirty-nine percent of MRSA prevalence in the current study is higher than 26.6% [34], 18.1% [35] and 7.7% [22] reported in Ethiopia which could be explained by difference in sampling site where most of the resistant isolates in the current study were identified in the intensive care unit where repeated exposure to antibiotics is administered. The frequency of antibiotic administration and magnitude of nosocomial infection in each locality also may differ. Emergence of drug resistant strains especially methicillin-resistant S. aureus is a serious problem in hospital environments and infections caused by MRSA strains, 51% prevalence (hospital lab record for 8 years) are associated with longer hospital stay, prolonged antibiotic administration, and higher cost than infections caused by methicillin-susceptible S. aureus strains [36].high prevalence of MRSA strains from the environment, 39% could become the main factors for 51% resistance rate from clinical isolates.

Seventy 70 and 75% resistance prevalence for ampicillin and penicillin G Enterococci spp. in this study has a great implication since these antibiotics are preferable in the treatment of enterococcal infections [37] and the growing incidence of infections is a great concern due to multidrug resistance. Vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE) 9.1% prevalence in the current study make the scenario worse since vancomycin is the preferred choice in the case where this bacteria became resistant to other antibiotics. CoNS and S. aureus also showed a high level of resistance for chloramphenicol and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.

Gram-negative bacteria showed a high level of MDR rate than gram-positive bacteria in the current study that Acinetobacter spp. and P. aeruginosa showed high resistance rate for most of the antibiotics. Acinetobacter spp. showed the highest rate of resistance with a minimum resistance of 61.5%, this could possibly be due to the bacterial ability to resist many antibiotics or could possibly be due to selective pressure or abusing of the drugs in the hospital where 86.6% prevalence were recorded for commonest antibiotics like ciprofloxacin, and gentamicin. A higher number of resistances to effective antibiotics like ceftazidime 23.1% and imipenem 38.5% to Acinetobacter are a major public health problem since their disclosure could possibly lead to a therapeutic impasse in the hospital.

Higher levels of P. aeruginosa resistance were noticed for TMP-SXT 69.2%, gentamicin 61.5% and ceftriaxone 61.5% which is comparable with the study conducted in Ethiopia [31] of which 95, 62.5, and 58.2% resistance were detected on TMP-SXT, gentamicin and ceftriaxone antibiotics respectively.

Conclusions and recommendation

Higher prevalence airborne bacteria of clinical concern, CoNS, S. aureus, Enterococci spp., Acinetobacter spp., P. aeruginosa and E. coli were found in WSUTRH. This could be significant factors for the high prevalence of post-surgical site infection and respiratory tract infection in the study area. High MDR resistance rate (>70%) of the isolates on the hospital air is a clinical concern since antibiotic resistant rate increased in alarming rate. Effective and new antibiotics, like ceftazidime and imipenem resistance, for the study area in the hospital air could be projected to the patients and could pose major problem for antibiotic stewardship programs. So this findings deserves attention, and requires effective infection control measures like proper disinfection and regular cleaning, restriction of patient relatives’ movement in and out of the wards/units to protect both patients and healthcare workers. Though isolates were not identified from patients in this study, the role of contaminated indoor air could be pathogenic if contact is established with patients; it is pertinent that their presence should be controlled.

Abbreviations

DR:

delivery room

ICU:

intensive care unit

MDR:

multi drug resistant

OT:

operation theatre

TMP-SXT:

trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole

WSUTRH:

Wolaita Sodo University teaching referral Hospital

References

  1. Muhammad UK, Isa MA, Aliyu ZM. Distribution of potential nosocomial pathogens isolated from environments of four selected hospital in Sokoto, North Western Nigeria. J Microbiol Biotechnol Res. 2013;3:139–43.

    Google Scholar 

  2. Osaro EF, Ufuoma IO, Dorcas AO. Hospital indoor airborne microflora in private and government owned hospitals in Benin City, Nigeria. WJMS. 2008;3:34–8.

    Google Scholar 

  3. Tayh G. Risk factors and antimicrobial resistance of pathogens isolated from Burn Units at Local Hospitals in Gaza Strip, Palestine. 2011. http://library.iugaza.edu.ps/thesis/96729.pdf.

  4. Anguzu J, Olil D. Drug sensitivity patterns of bacterial isolates from septic post-operative wounds in a regional referral hospital in Uganda. Afr Health Sci. 2007;7:148–54.

    CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  5. Hidron AI, Edwards JR, Patel J, Horan TC, Sievert DM, Pollock DA. Antimicrobial-resistant pathogens associated with healthcare-associated infections: annual summary of data reported to the national healthcare safety network at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2006–2007. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2008;29:996–1011.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  6. Nunes GZ, Martins SA, Altoe FL, Nishikawa MM. Indoor air microbiological evaluation of offices, hospitals, industries, and shopping centers. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz. 2005;100:351–7.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  7. Suzuki A, Namba Y, Matsuura M, Horisawa A. Bacterial contamination of floors and other surfaces in operating rooms: a 5-year survey. J Hyg. 1984;9393:559–66.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  8. CDC. Antibiotic resistance threats in the United States. http://www.cdc.gov/drugresistance/pdf/ar-threats-2013-508.pdf.

  9. Roy FC, Sarah S, Charles D. The role of the healthcare environment in the spread of multidrug-resistant organisms: update on current best practices for containment. Ther Adv Infect Dis. 2014;2:79–90.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  10. Davane M, Suryawanshi N, Pichare A, Nagoba B. Pseudomonas aeruginosa from hospital environment. J Microbiol Infect Dis. 2014;4:42–3.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  11. Asghar AH, Faidah HS. Frequency and antimicrobial susceptibility of gram-negative bacteria isolated from 2 hospitals in Makkah, Saudi Arabia. Saudi Med J. 2009;30:1017–23.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  12. WHO. The evolving threats of antimicrobial resistance, option for action.2012; ISSN 9789241503181.

  13. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Healthcare infection control advisory committee. Guidelines for environmental infection control in healthcare facilities. Atlanta; 2003.

  14. Guidelines for the prevention and control of multi-drug resistant organisms (MDRO) excluding MRSA in the healthcare setting. Royal College of Physicians clinical advisory group on healthcare associated infections in association with HSE quality and patient safety; 2012.

  15. Lee TB, Baker OG, Lee JT, Scheckler WE. Recommended practices for surveillance. Am J Infect Control. 1998;26:277–88.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  16. Pasquarella C, Pitzurra O, Savino A. The index of microbial air contamination (review). J Hosp Infect. 2000;46:241–56.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  17. Bergey. Manual of systematic bacteriology volume 1 to 5; 2014.

  18. Bauer AW, Kirby WM, Sherris JC, Turck M. Antibiotic susceptibility testing by a standardized single disk method. Am J Clin Pathol. 1996;45:493–6.

    Google Scholar 

  19. CLSI performance standards for antimicrobial susceptibility testing; twenty-fourth informational supplement, M100-S24; 2014.

  20. Magiorakos AP. Multidrug-resistant, extensive drug resistant and pandrug-resistant bacteria, an international expert proposal for interim standard definitions for acquired. Clin Microbiol Infect. 2012;18:268–81.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  21. Chalachew G, Gebre K, Wondewosen T. Indoor air bacterial load and antibiotic susceptibility pattern of isolates in operating rooms and surgical wards at Jimma University specialized hospital, Southwest Ethiopia. Ethiop J Health Sci. 2011;21:9–17.

    Google Scholar 

  22. Tewelde T, Yibrah B, Kibrom G. Microbial contamination of operating theatre at Ayder Referral Hospital, Northern Ethiopia. Int J Pharm Sci Res. 2015;6:1264–8.

    Google Scholar 

  23. Ekhaise FO, Isitor EE, Idehen O, Emoghene AO. Airborne microflora in the atmosphere of an hospital environment of University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH), Benin City, Nigeria. World J Agric Sci. 2010;6:166–70.

    Google Scholar 

  24. Singh K, Dar FA, Kishor K. Bacterial contamination in operating theaters of district hospital Budgam in Kashmir division. Innov J Med Health Sci. 2013;3:62–5.

    Google Scholar 

  25. Pradhan SB, Shrestha CD. Microbiological surveillance of hospital environment in a Medical College Hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal. Int J Infect Microbiol. 2012;1:76–9.

    Google Scholar 

  26. Alireza A, Sanam M. Microbial profile of air contamination in hospital ward. Iran J Pathol. 2012;7:168–74.

    Google Scholar 

  27. Awosika SA, Olajubu FA, Amusa NA. Microbiological assessment of indoor air of a teaching hospital in Nigeria. Asian Pac J Trop Biomed. 2012;2:465–8.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  28. Ping YH, Zhi YS, Chi HC, Walter D. Airborne and surface-bound microbial contamination in two intensive care units of a medical center in central Taiwan. Aerosol Air Qual Res. 2013;13:1060–9.

    Google Scholar 

  29. Sanaa OY, Amani E. Isolation of potential pathogenic bacteria from the air of hospital-delivery and nursing rooms. J Appl Sci. 2010;10:1011–4.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  30. Collee JG, Duguid JP, Fraser AG, Marmion BP. Mackie and MaCartney. Practical medical microbiology. 13th ed. London: Churchill Livingstone; 1989. p. 432–44.

    Google Scholar 

  31. Mitiku M, Ali S, Kibru G. Antimicrobial drug resistance and disinfectants susceptibility of Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates from clinical and environmental samples in Jimma University Specialized Hospital, Southwest Ethiopia. Am J Biomed Life Sci. 2015;2:40–5.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  32. Awoke D. Longitudinal bacteriology of burn patients at Yekatit 12 hospital burn center, Addis-Ababa, Ethiopia AAU electronic library 1–51; 2011.

  33. Frieden T. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Antibiotic resistance threats in the United States.CDC; 2013.

  34. Teklu S, Getenet B, Tesfaye K, Tsegaye S. Bacterial contamination, bacterial profile and antimicrobial susceptibility pattern of isolates from stethoscopes at Jimma University Specialized Hospital. Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob. 2013;12:39.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  35. Edosa, K. Bacterial profile and antibiotic sensitivity pattern of the isolates from operating room environments in government hospitals in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.AAU electronic library:1–53; 2015.

  36. Kirecci E, Miraloglu M. A research of nasal methicillin-resistant/sensitive staphylococcus aureus and pharyngeal beta-hemolytic Streptococcus carriage in midwifery students in Kahramanaras, Turkey. Ethiop J Health Dev. 2010;24:57–60.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  37. Murray BE. Vancomycin-resistant enterococcal infections. N Engl J Med. 2000;342:710.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

Download references

Authors’ contributions

FS: Conceived the study, FS, AR YA, and FW: Participated in the design of the study and performed the statistical analysis, FS, FW: Interpreted the data: FS: Obtained ethical clearance and permission for study: FW: Supervised data collectors: FS, FW: Drafting the article or revisiting it critically for important intellectual content. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Wolaita Sodo University for funding this research and teaching referral Hospital nurses and medical laboratory staffs for data collection and processing.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Availability of data and materials

The data that support the findings of this study are available. Anyone interested can get upon reasonable online request by writing to fitha2007@yahoo.com.

Ethics approval

The study proposal got ethical approval from Wolaita Sodo University ethical review Board.

Funding

The funding for this study was granted by Wolaita Sodo University. The funding body had no influence on study design, data collection, analysis and interpretation of data, writing of the manuscript and in the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Fithamlak Bisetegen Solomon.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Solomon, F.B., Wadilo, F.W., Arota, A.A. et al. Antibiotic resistant airborne bacteria and their multidrug resistance pattern at University teaching referral Hospital in South Ethiopia. Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob 16, 29 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12941-017-0204-2

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12941-017-0204-2

Keywords