There are a wide variety of powder-free gloves that can now be used by surgeons. The purpose of this study was to quantify the forces required to don these powder-free surgical gloves. The lowest donning forces for wet hands was encountered with powder-free gloves coated with a hydrogel polymer. In
Ease of donning commercially available latex examination gloves
✍ Scribed by C�t�, Stephanie J. ;Fisher, Mark D. ;Kheir, John N. ;Paull, Robert B. ;Neal, Jeffrey G. ;Jackson, Elise M. ;Suber, Freeman ;Thacker, John G. ;O'Keefe, J. Stewart ;Edlich, Richard F.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 82 KB
- Volume
- 43
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9304
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
There are a wide variety of latex examination gloves now available for use by health care providers. A prospective randomized trial was completed to quantify the forces required to don a sample of seven cornstarch-lubricated gloves and 13 powderfree latex examination gloves. The data collected was analyzed by a 20 1 2 general factorial ANOVA, as well as two 1-way ANOVAs using a least significance difference post hoc test. Some powder-free gloves can be easily donned with dry or wet hands without tearing with forces comparable to those encountered with powdered gloves. With the advent of these powder-free examination gloves, powdered gloves can now be abandoned, protecting health professionals and patients from the dangers of absorbable dusting powders. Despite the dangers of the absorbable dusting powders and the Food and Drug Administration's requirement for labeling examination glove boxes, some manufacturers of powdered examination gloves do not appropriately label their boxes with a warning to the health professional and patient of the presence of powder.
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