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Counts of Air-Borne Bacteria as Indices of Air Hygiene

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

D. D. Reid
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Statistics and Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
O. M. Lidwell
Affiliation:
Air Hygiene Laboratory, Central Public Health Laboratory, London
R. E. O. Williams
Affiliation:
Air Hygiene Laboratory, Central Public Health Laboratory, London
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An attempt has been made to assess the value of counts of bacteria in the air of occupied rooms as indices of the risks of air-borne cross-infection in these rooms. Data collected during a field trial of ultra-violet irradiation in schoolrooms have been analysed to establish the correlation between counts of Streptococcus salivarius or of the general flora and classroom secondary attack rates for measles and the incidence of four groups of respiratory affections. Variations in classroom environment and child age and behaviour were taken into account in the analysis.

The Str. salivarius count has been shown to be significantly related to the risk of classroom transfer of measles, but not to the incidence of respiratory disease. For the general flora counts the reverse was true.

A discussion of these results in the light of the effects of ultra-violet air disinfection on the incidence of presumably air-borne diseases leads to the conclusion that the Str. salivarius count may reasonably be taken as index of the risk of classroom transfer of measles, but that no such assumption is possible about the value of general flora counts in the measurement of air hygiene in relation to respiratory diseases.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1956

References

Air Hygiene Committee (1954). Air disinfection with ultra-violet irradiation. Spec. Rep.Ser. med. Res. Coun., Lond., no. 283.Google Scholar
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World Health Organization (1948). Manual of the International Classification of Diseases, Injuries and Causes of Death. Geneva: W.H.O.Google Scholar