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Guilty by gown: reconsidering contact precautions for COVID-19

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 June 2025

David Zamora Diaz*
Affiliation:
Internal Medicine Resident, Loyola University Health System - MacNeal Hospital, Berwyn, IL, USA
*
Corresponding author: David Zamora Diaz; Email: dr.davidzamoradiaz@gmail.com

Abstract

Information

Type
Letter to the Editor
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America

To the Editor

As a trainee, I often find myself donning gowns and gloves dozens of times per day when caring for hospitalized patients with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 infection. Despite our improved understanding of the virus transmission and the protection offered by respiratory Personal protective equipment (PPE), contact precautions remain the standard. With each plastic gown I tie on, sometimes the seventh visit to the same patient in a single day, an increasing uneasiness creeps in.

That guilt arises from multiple sources. First, the discomfort and stigma that patients experience while under contact precautions. Second, the substantial amount of plastic waste generated daily. Third, the cost burden placed on hospital systems. I frequently raise these concerns with attending physicians, questioning whether this routine use of gowns and gloves is still warranted. The answer is often the same: “We do it because it’s what the CDC recommends.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) continues to recommend both airborne and contact precautions for hospitalized patients with COVID-19, requiring healthcare personnel to wear gowns and gloves in addition to respirators and eye protection. 1 While these recommendations were appropriate during the early, uncertain days of the pandemic, they may no longer be fully supported by current evidence.

We now understand that SARS-CoV-2 is primarily spread through aerosol transmission, not through contact with contaminated surfaces.Reference Onakpoya, Heneghan and Spencer 2 Fomite transmission, once a major concern, now appears to play a minimal role in real-world settings. While hand hygiene remains crucial, the additional benefit of gowns and gloves for COVID-19 patients in routine clinical scenarios is less clear.

Others have raised similar questions about the continued role of contact precautions for COVID-19. Rodriguez-Nava et al. recently called for a reassessment of routine gown and glove use in healthcare settings, citing minimal evidence of benefit and increasing concern about harms.Reference Rodriguez-Nava, Diekema and Salinas 3 Rabin et al. also urged the infectious diseases community to reconsider this practice, arguing that outdated precautions could undermine both patient-centered care and public trust.Reference Rabin, Marr and Blumberg 4 These concerns are consistent with the growing sentiment among frontline providers: our infection control strategies must evolve with the evidence.

The potential harms of routine contact precautions are well-documented. Patients in isolation report greater feelings of loneliness, stigma, and dissatisfaction with care. Providers may reduce time spent at the bedside, resulting in fewer clinical reassessments and lower quality of care.Reference Morgan, Diekema, Sepkowitz and Perencevich 5 Contact precautions have been associated with delays in imaging, lab tests, and specialist consultations, delays that may directly impact outcomes.

Beyond patient care, the environmental impact appears to be significant. Gowns and gloves are made of single-use plastics. The healthcare sector is already a major contributor to plastic pollution and carbon emissions. Continued overuse of unnecessary PPE only exacerbates this crisis.

Recent research has linked microplastic accumulation to adverse health outcomes. Microplastics have now been detected in human blood, placental tissue, and most alarmingly, brain tissue.Reference Nihart, Garcia and El Hayek 6 A study by Nihart, et al. demonstrated the presence of synthetic particles in post-mortem brain specimens, raising concerns about neurotoxicity and systemic inflammation. Another investigation identified nanoplastics embedded in atheromas, with associations to major cardiovascular events.Reference Marfella, Prattichizzo and Sardu 7 While causality remains under investigation, the precautionary principle suggests that we reduce unnecessary plastic exposure wherever possible, especially in a field that commends prevention.

Finally, the financial costs cannot be ignored. A 2009 review estimated that contact precautions increase daily care costs by over $150 per patient.Reference Morgan, Diekema, Sepkowitz and Perencevich 5 In resource-constrained settings, these added costs may come at the expense of other critical interventions.

To conclude, airborne precautions remain essential for COVID-19, particularly during aerosol-generating procedures or in high-risk wards. N95 masks and eye protection should continue to be used in these contexts. However, the universal application of contact precautions, including gowns and gloves for all patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19, should now be subjected to rigorous, scientific, pro-con debate.

While adhering to guidelines remains essential, revisiting them as science evolves is equally important. Current policies should reflect SARS-CoV-2’s transition to an endemic phase and support thoughtful, context-driven decisions. This includes balancing infection control with patient dignity, provider judgment, and environmental sustainability. Practices such as contact precautions might warrant re-evaluation as other strategies like vaccination, masking, ventilation, and respiratory hygiene, may have a more positive impact on prevention.

As health-care providers, we have a responsibility to thoughtfully assess both benefits and risks in the pursuit of evidence-based care.

Acknowledgments

None.

Author contribution

Zamora Diaz is the sole contributor to this article.

Financial support

None.

Competing interests

None.

References

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Infection control: COVID-19. https://www.cdc.gov/covid/hcp/infection-control/index.html. Published 2024. Accessed February 20, 2025.Google Scholar
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Nihart, AJ, Garcia, MA, El Hayek, E, et al. Bioaccumulation of microplastics in decedent human brains. Nat Med. Published online February 3, 2025. doi: 10.1038/s41591-024-03453-1 Google Scholar
Marfella, R, Prattichizzo, F, Sardu, C, et al. Microplastics and nanoplastics in atheromas and cardiovascular events. N Engl J Med 2024;390:900910. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2309822 Google ScholarPubMed