Rubber Gloves: 'Born' - and Now Banished - at Johns Hopkins; Move
Posted: 01/22/2008
BALTIMORE, Jan. 14 (AScribe Newswire) -- William Stewart Halsted, The
Johns Hopkins Hospital's first surgeon in chief, is widely credited as the first
to develop and introduce rubber surgical gloves in the United States. That was
in 1894, five years after the institution opened.
Now, in an effort to make medical care safer for patients and health care
workers, The Johns Hopkins Hospital has become the first major medical
institution to become "latex safe" by ending all use of latex gloves and almost
all medical latex products.
"Latex hospital gloves were invented here, so it's only fitting that
Johns Hopkins takes the initiative to promoting alternatives," says Johns
Hopkins anesthesiologist Robert H. Brown, M.D., M.P.H., the chair of the John
Hopkins Hospital Latex Task Force and one of many Hopkins faculty and staff
members who have contributed to making the hospital latex-safe.
It was at Hopkins that immunologists Robert Hamilton, Ph.D., and Franklin
Adkinson, M.D., conducted early key research related to the problems of natural
rubber latex as an allergen. Furthermore, Brown points out, the nurses and other
frontline hospital workers have been instrumental in implementing the latex-safe
policy and educating the staff. Studies show that roughly 6 percent of the
general population and up to 15 percent of health care works are allergic to
latex, with the higher rate among medical personnel due to longer periods of
contact with natural rubber. In addition to surgical gloves, latex is used in
numerous medical devices such as tourniquets, blood pressure cuffs and
stethoscope tubes. The anaphylactic reactions, similar to those caused by foods
such as peanuts or by bee sting allergies, can include a drop in blood pressure,
an irregular heartbeat, swelling in the hands and feet and constriction of the
airways. In extreme cases, anaphylactic shock, which can occur minutes after the
exposure, can lead to death.
Allergic reactions generally result from exposure to natural proteins, in
this case proteins specific to natural rubber latex, a product from rubber
trees.
Currently available replacement gloves are made of one of three synthetic
products -- neoprene, polyisoprene or vinyl, none of which contain natural plant
proteins.
Johns Hopkins is now using sterile neoprene and polyisoprene gloves in
the operating room because they have a more sensitive feel.
"The sensitivity and fit of the new gloves are the same as what you get
with latex gloves," says Julie Freischlag, M.D., professor and chair of surgery.
"Unless someone told you, you wouldn't know the difference. The only down side
is that they are a little more expensive."
Sterile neoprene and polyisoprene gloves cost 30 percent to 50 percent
more than latex gloves. Nonsterile neoprene and vinyl examine gloves cost
approximately the same as those made from latex. Johns Hopkins uses mostly
neoprene gloves for all nonsterile procedures that require glove protection.
Dr. Brown says the risk of developing an allergic reaction to latex is
higher if contact is made with broken skin or mucous membranes - such as when
hands are raw from multiple scrubbings or when health care workers breathe in
the powder that makes the gloves easier to put on. Patients for whom latex
medical products are commonly used for treatment - such as children with
conditions such as bladder exstrophy or spinal bifida - can have as high as an
80 percent chance of developing an allergic reaction to the natural rubber
latex.
Halsted is reported to have developed the latex glove to protect the
hands of his scrub nurse from the harsh antiseptics in widespread use as
disinfectants. By 1966, disposable latex gloves were the norm in operating rooms
nationwide, and in the 1980s, the need for "universal precautions," prompted by
the AIDS epidemic, increased their use outside the operating room and among
health care workers everywhere. As glove use proliferated, so did the rate of
allergic reactions, and by the mid-1990s, latex allergies were considered a
major health issue. Dr. Brown says he prefers the term "latex safe" to "latex
free" because removing all sources of natural rubber remains a bit of a
challenge.
"We are still searching the hospital for the few remaining medical latex
products that we might have overlooked, although we can safely say that all
major latex products that are a clear risk to health care workers and patients
have been eliminated," he says.
Robert Brown and Julie Frieschlag talk about the transition to latex-free
surgical gloves and a latex-safe environment at Johns Hopkins:
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/mediaII/Podcasts/latex.html
An image is available at:
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2008/images/glove.jpg
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CONTACT: Eric Vohr, Johns Hopkins Medicine Media Relations and Public
Affairs, 410-955-8665,
evohr1@jhmi.edu
Media Contact: See above.
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Link to Original Press Release:
http://newswire.ascribe.org/cgi-bin/behold.pl?ascribeid=20080114.132012&time
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