Contamination of the handles and bases of shopping carts by pathogenic and multi-drug resistant bacteria
Background and Aims: Shopping carts (SCs) are considered as
highly contaminated public surfaces, and may play a role in transmission of
some harbor heterotrophic bacteria to human being. Therefore, this study
aimed to examine the hygienic conditions and presence of heterotrophic
bacteria on the surface of the handles and bases of SCs taken from shopping
stores in Al-Mafraq city, Jordan. Methods: Five different SCs were selected
randomly from four shopping stores (designated as A, B, C and D) during
May through June, 2011. Two dry swab samples were taken from each SC,
one from the handle and another one from the base. All samples were
cultured on nutrient agar as none selective medium and incubated aerobically
at 37 ?C for 48 hours. The resulting number of colony forming units (CFUs)
in each plate was converted to CFU per cm2
surface area. The species of
bacterial isolates were determined by biochemical tests and 16S rDNA
sequencing.
Results: The number of heterotrophic bacteria per SC range between 6 to
133 CFU/cm2 surface area for the cart handles and between 6 to 300
CFU/cm2 surface area for the cart bases, indicating higher numbers of
heterotrophic bacteria in the cart bases as well as more fluctuations in the
number of heterotrophic bacteria at the handles and bases of SCs. These
analyses also confirmed the presence of seven coliform and three
noncoliform species on the tested surface of the handles and bases of the
selected stores. These include E. coli spp., Acinetobacter calcoaceticus,
Burkholderia cepacia, Yersinia enterocolitica, Tatumeella ptyseas,
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Shigella sonnei, Bacillus cereus, and Bacillus
pumilus. Conclusion: The resulting data revealed that some of these species are
pathogenic as well as a multi-drug resistant. These data also indicated that
poor sanitation and hygiene conditions appear to exist among the tested SCs
of the selected stores. It also suggest that these SCs might act as source of
transmitting of pathogens which might pose a serious health risk to shoppers.
Therefore, this study pleads for a strong cleaning approaches for SCs as well
as community education to promote hand hygiene, both of which are
important and complementary.