Originally Posted by chuddy
Just updating our standards and guidelines for infection control, currently we wear gloves and aprons for all contact with the babies (even after hand washing and when comforting them), i would like to stop the use of gloves when giving comfort and bottle feeding as i feel the babies need this human touch in relation to developmetnal care - wondered what other units do and rational behind this - i have the support of my head nurse
michelle

I can't think of a rationale TO use gloves and ?aprons (not sure what that looks like) for most routine contact.
Good handwashing and hand sanitizer between babies and between tasks on the same baby (e.g., changing diaper, then feeding). Isolation apparel (gowns and gloves) for contact isolation, separate baby to another area and keep in incubator for airborne infection.
If I am trying to assess a baby's oral-motor function and, therefore, need to have my finger in the baby's mouth, I wear gloves. And to mix/thaw/handle/fortify breast milk. But I don't just to feed the baby. We don't wear isolation gowns for routine care any more either. Not for >10 years. Parents just wash their hands before entering, too. No gowns.
I think you need to determine what the community standard is. If all the NICU's in your part of England were aprons and gloves (and have the literature to prove it's necessary), then, from a legal standpoint, you might have to do the same. If you can find literature to state it's
not necessary, you can go for it.
One source for info is the Center for Disease Control (CDC.gov), or the Brittish equivalent, which, I'm ashamed to say I do not know.
I hope you can find a way not to continue the practice. Good Luck.