City
Epaper

COVID-19 PPE can cause serious skin injuries: Study

By IANS | Updated: May 2, 2020 15:45 IST

Medical staff treating COVID-19-infected patients found that 42.8 per cent experienced serious skin injury related to the use of personal protective equipment (PPE), including masks, goggles, face shields, and protective gowns, according to a study.The study, published in the journal Advances in Wound Care by a large team of Chinese researchers, said that these skin injuries put staff at increased risk of infection, with insufficient prevention and treatment measures in place.

Open in App

Medical staff treating COVID-19-infected patients found that 42.8 per cent experienced serious skin injury related to the use of personal protective equipment (PPE), including masks, goggles, face shields, and protective gowns, according to a study.

The study, published in the journal Advances in Wound Care by a large team of Chinese researchers, said that these skin injuries put staff at increased risk of infection, with insufficient prevention and treatment measures in place.

"We wanted to investigate the prevalence, characteristics, and preventive status of skin injuries caused by personal protective equipment (PPE) in medical staff," the authors wrote.

A cross-sectional survey was conducted online for understanding skin injuries among medical staff fighting COVID-19 on February 8–22. Participants voluntarily answered and submitted the questionnaire with a cell phone.

The researchers found the overall prevalence of skin injuries was 42.8 per cent with three types of PPE-related skin injuries: device-related pressure injuries, moist associated skin damage and skin tear.

Several factors increased the risk for skin injury: heavy sweating, greater daily wearing time, being male, and using grade 3 versus grade 2 PPE.

Because of the emergency situation, there are some limitations to this study, such as it was difficult to observe the adverse outcome of skin injuries among medical staff and impossible to compare the results of prevention and treatment measures.

"These might leave us opportunities for further study," the researchers noted.

Another study, published in the Journal of Wound Care last month, emphasises the problems that can arise with face masks, being worn for long periods by healthcare professionals.

The researchers suggested that people wearing masks keep their skin clean, well-hydrated and moisturised and that barrier creams should be applied at least half an hour before masks are put on.

( With inputs from IANS )

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyDaily UPI-based transactions surpass 700 million for first time

BusinessDaily UPI-based transactions surpass 700 million for first time

BusinessIndia's service PMI up marginally to 60.5 in July, but job creation slows to 15 month low: HSBC PMI

NationalAfter Article 370 end, Pakistan's terror tactics fail to unnerve Kashmiris

BusinessDeep-Tech Firm BUSINESSNEXT Continues Strong Streak: Recognized in Gartner® Sales Force Automation Magic Quadrant™ for 12 Consecutive Years

Health Realted Stories

HealthEven healthy processed food may not be good for your weight loss journey: Study

HealthBone Cancer: Want to Protect Your Bone Health? Start by Noticing These Small Clues

HealthInflammation linked to frailty, social deprivation and heart disease risk in women: Study

HealthAurobindo Pharma’s Q1 net profit falls 10 pc to Rs 824 crore

HealthBangladesh: Two more people die of dengue, death toll rises to 86 in 2025