https://doi.org/10.25678/0002G6

Data for: Retention of E. coli and water on the skin after liquid contact

The frequent contact people have with liquids containing pathogenic microorganisms provides opportunities for disease transmission. In this work, we quantified the transfer of bacteria - using E. coli as a model- from liquid to skin, estimated liquid retention on the skin after different contact activities (hand immersion, wet-cloth and wet-surface contact), and estimated liquid transfer following hand-to-mouth contacts. The results of our study show that the number of E. coli transferred to the skin per surface area (n [E. coli/cm2]) can be modeled using n = C (10-3.38+h), where C [E. coli/cm3] is the concentration of E. coli in the liquid, and h [cm] is the film thickness of the liquid retained on the skin. Findings from the E. coli transfer experiments reveal a significant difference between the transfer of E. coli from liquid to the skin and the previously reported transfer of viruses to the skin. Additionally, our results demonstrate that the time elapsed since the interaction significantly influences liquid retention, therefore modulating the risks associated with human interaction with contaminated liquids. The findings enhance our understanding of liquid-mediated disease transmission processes and provide quantitative estimates as inputs for microbial risk assessments.

Data and Resources

Citation

This Data Package

Pitol, A. K., Kohn, T., & Julian, T. R. (2020). Data for: Retention of E. coli and water on the skin after liquid contact (Version 1.0) [Data set]. Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology. https://doi.org/10.25678/0002G6

The associated article

Pitol, A. K., Kohn, T., & Julian, T. R. (2020). Retention of E. coli and water on the skin after liquid contact. PLOS ONE, 15(9), e0238998. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238998

Metadata

Open Data Open Data
Author
  • Pitol, Ana K.
  • Kohn, Tamar
  • Julian, Timothy R.
Keywords E. coli,water,liquid transfer,hands,quantitative microbial risk assessment,qmra
Taxa (scientific names)
  • Escherichia coli
Organisms (generic terms)
  • E. coli
Systems
  • hands
Timerange
  • 2018-01 TO 2019-01
Review Level domain specific
Curator Julian, Tim
Contact Tim.Julian@eawag.ch
DOI 10.25678/0002G6