ASTM Int'l Publishes Latest Standard in Hand Hygiene Series - ASTM E 2613
August 12, 2008 // Published as a news service by IHS
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ASTM International Committee E35 on Pesticides and Alternative Control Agents published the last in a series of three ASTM International standards that address the activity of hand hygiene agents against microbes that can be transmitted via contaminated hands.
Subcommittee E35.15 on Antimicrobial Agents developed ASTM E 2613 - Test Method for Determining Fungus-Eliminating Effectiveness of Hygienic Handwash and Handrub Agents Using Fingerpads of Adults.
"The fingerpad methods can be used to test handwash as well as handrub agents," said Syed Sattar, E35 member, professor emeritus of microbiology and founding director of the Centre for Research on Environmental Microbiology, University of Ottawa.
"When testing handrub agents, they can determine the incremental removal or inactivation of the target organisms after exposure to the test formulation itself, post-treatment rinsing with water and the terminal drying of hands."
Sattar said that the microbes to be tested are relevant in healthcare settings as well as in settings in which food is processed, handled or served.
Researchers in hand hygiene, manufacturers of hand hygiene formulations and government regulators for post-market monitoring of label claims are all potential users of ASTM E 2613.
The other two standards in the series of hand hygiene agent standards developed by Subcommittee E35.15 are ASTM E 1838 - Test Method for Determining the Virus-Eliminating Effectiveness of Liquid Hygienic Handwash and Handrub Agents Using the Fingerpads of Adult Volunteers and ASTM E 2276 - Test Method for Determining the Bacteria-Eliminating Effectiveness of Hygienic Handwash and Handrub Agents Using the Fingerpads of Adult Subjects.
"All three ASTM standards are quite unique in that they are fully quantitative while incorporating all the essential elements of how hands are routinely decontaminated," said Sattar, who said that both ASTM E1838 and ASTM E2276 are listed in the World Health Organization's guidelines on hand hygiene.
Source: ASTM International.