Using UVC Light To Disinfect Shoes

It’s easy for shoes to cross-contaminate surfaces in hospitals


Shoes and even shoe covers in hospital and healthcare settings can easily cross-contaminate surfaces and spread viruses, including COVID-19. Studies have shown contamination after just five minutes of walking hallways or spending time in the bathroom. Shoes and socks then spread viruses to other surfaces. For example, if a patient gets out of bed, uses the bathroom and then returns to bed, bacteria from the floor will migrate to the bed to be easily touched by the patient, doctors and nurses. 

 

Floors and shoes are typically considered low risk areas and while routinely cleaning, they are not disinfected. But this could be a dangerous error. 

 

A recent interview with Kevin W. Garey, PharmD, MS, FASHP, Professor and Chair of the Department of Pharmacy Practice and Translational Research at University of Houston College of Pharmacy, discusses the benefit of using UVC light to disinfect shoes to prevent virus spread. 

 

Question: What role do you see for UVC light in infection prevention on shoes? What protocols do you recommend following?

 

Answer from Kevin W. Garey: Because we know that floors are often contaminated and that shoe bottoms carry an abundance of unwanted pathogens, we need to start addressing the issue of recontamination. We need to identify the places where we want to avoid recontamination and start to target and eradicate organisms on shoe bottoms in those areas. 

 

Using UVC light to solve this problem is a particularly strong method for keeping these areas sterile (i.e. surgical suites, ICU units, pharmacies, etc.).  Our research has found that a UVC device targeting shoe soles can decrease subsequent environmental bioburden and patient colonization.

 

Question: What are the benefits of UV-C light over other sanitization methods you have seen employed?

 

Answer: The nice thing about UVC is that it’s difficult for organisms to become resistant to it, as opposed to antibiotics and antibacterial cleaners. For shoes, specifically, there really isn’t any other suitable method. You can use booties, but if you walk on a contaminated floor, you’re still going to spread organisms with each step. It’s also been shown that the bottoms of shoes contained inside the booties can contaminate the booties themselves. So, there really isn’t a good alternative, which makes UVC shoe sanitizer technology so novel and interesting.

 

Question: How well do conventional UVC room units work with pathogens found on floors? Wouldn’t that be sufficient to prevent spread?

 

Answer: Whatever you can do to clean the floors, do it. However, after you’ve done a deep clean of the floor, you don’t want to have a dirty shoe bottom ruin the work you just did. So, UVC room units and UVC shoe sanitizers should work together as a synergistic one-two punch to ensure that floors are clean and that they do not get recontaminated. 



December 22, 2020


Topic Area: Infection Control


Recent Posts

Grounding Healthcare Spaces in Hospitality Principles

Thoughtful design can establish the calm of a spa and the restorative feeling of a resort in healthcare spaces, bringing benefits for patients and care providers.


UC Davis Health Selects Rudolph and Sletten for Central Utility Plant Expansion

Work is already underway with substantial completion anticipated in the fall of 2027.


Cape Cod Healthcare Opens Upper 2 Floors of Edwin Barbey Patient Care Pavilion

The first two floors opened for patients in May 2025 and house the Davenport-Mugar Cancer Center.


Building Sustainable Healthcare for an Aging Population

Traditional responses — building more primary and secondary care facilities — are no longer sustainable.


Froedtert ThedaCare Announces Opening of ThedaCare Medical Center-Oshkosh

The organization broke ground on the health campus in March 2024.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.