Staff perception on biomedical or health care waste management: a qualitative study in a rural tertiary care hospital in India.

Health care or biomedical waste, if not managed properly, can be of high risk to the hospital staff, the patients, the community, public health and the environment, especially in low and middle income settings where proper disposal norms are often not followed. Our aim was to explore perceptions of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sudhir Chandra Joshi, Vishal Diwan, Ashok J Tamhankar, Rita Joshi, Harshada Shah, Megha Sharma, Ashish Pathak, Ragini Macaden, Cecilia Stålsby Lundborg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4449010?pdf=render
id doaj-67b040f97ca44a3494e45b4c9bec8ed7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-67b040f97ca44a3494e45b4c9bec8ed72020-11-25T02:08:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01105e012838310.1371/journal.pone.0128383Staff perception on biomedical or health care waste management: a qualitative study in a rural tertiary care hospital in India.Sudhir Chandra JoshiVishal DiwanAshok J TamhankarRita JoshiHarshada ShahMegha SharmaAshish PathakRagini MacadenCecilia Stålsby LundborgHealth care or biomedical waste, if not managed properly, can be of high risk to the hospital staff, the patients, the community, public health and the environment, especially in low and middle income settings where proper disposal norms are often not followed. Our aim was to explore perceptions of staff of an Indian rural tertiary care teaching hospital on hospital waste management.A qualitative study was conducted using 10 focus group discussions (FGDs), with different professional groups, cleaning staff, nurses, medical students, doctors and administrators. The FGD guide included the following topics: (i) role of Health Care Waste Management (HCWM) in prevention of health care associated infections, (ii) awareness of and views about HCWM-related guidelines/legislation, (iii) current HCWM practices, (iv) perception and preparedness related to improvements of the current practices, and (v) proper implementation of the available guidelines/legislation. The FGDs were recorded, transcribed verbatim, translated to English (when conducted in Hindi) and analysed using content analysis.Two themes were identified: Theme (A), 'Challenges in integration of HCWM in organizational practice,' with the categories (I) Awareness and views about HCWM, (II) Organizational practices regarding HCWM, and (III) Challenges in Implementation of HCWM; and Theme (B), 'Interventions to improve HCWM,' with three categories, (I) Educational and motivational interventions, (II) Organizational culture change, and (III) Policy-related interventions.A gap between knowledge and actual practice regarding HCWM was highlighted in the perception of the hospital staff. The participants suggested organizational changes, training and monitoring to address this. The information generated is relevant not merely to the microsystem studied but to other institutions in similar settings.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4449010?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sudhir Chandra Joshi
Vishal Diwan
Ashok J Tamhankar
Rita Joshi
Harshada Shah
Megha Sharma
Ashish Pathak
Ragini Macaden
Cecilia Stålsby Lundborg
spellingShingle Sudhir Chandra Joshi
Vishal Diwan
Ashok J Tamhankar
Rita Joshi
Harshada Shah
Megha Sharma
Ashish Pathak
Ragini Macaden
Cecilia Stålsby Lundborg
Staff perception on biomedical or health care waste management: a qualitative study in a rural tertiary care hospital in India.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sudhir Chandra Joshi
Vishal Diwan
Ashok J Tamhankar
Rita Joshi
Harshada Shah
Megha Sharma
Ashish Pathak
Ragini Macaden
Cecilia Stålsby Lundborg
author_sort Sudhir Chandra Joshi
title Staff perception on biomedical or health care waste management: a qualitative study in a rural tertiary care hospital in India.
title_short Staff perception on biomedical or health care waste management: a qualitative study in a rural tertiary care hospital in India.
title_full Staff perception on biomedical or health care waste management: a qualitative study in a rural tertiary care hospital in India.
title_fullStr Staff perception on biomedical or health care waste management: a qualitative study in a rural tertiary care hospital in India.
title_full_unstemmed Staff perception on biomedical or health care waste management: a qualitative study in a rural tertiary care hospital in India.
title_sort staff perception on biomedical or health care waste management: a qualitative study in a rural tertiary care hospital in india.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Health care or biomedical waste, if not managed properly, can be of high risk to the hospital staff, the patients, the community, public health and the environment, especially in low and middle income settings where proper disposal norms are often not followed. Our aim was to explore perceptions of staff of an Indian rural tertiary care teaching hospital on hospital waste management.A qualitative study was conducted using 10 focus group discussions (FGDs), with different professional groups, cleaning staff, nurses, medical students, doctors and administrators. The FGD guide included the following topics: (i) role of Health Care Waste Management (HCWM) in prevention of health care associated infections, (ii) awareness of and views about HCWM-related guidelines/legislation, (iii) current HCWM practices, (iv) perception and preparedness related to improvements of the current practices, and (v) proper implementation of the available guidelines/legislation. The FGDs were recorded, transcribed verbatim, translated to English (when conducted in Hindi) and analysed using content analysis.Two themes were identified: Theme (A), 'Challenges in integration of HCWM in organizational practice,' with the categories (I) Awareness and views about HCWM, (II) Organizational practices regarding HCWM, and (III) Challenges in Implementation of HCWM; and Theme (B), 'Interventions to improve HCWM,' with three categories, (I) Educational and motivational interventions, (II) Organizational culture change, and (III) Policy-related interventions.A gap between knowledge and actual practice regarding HCWM was highlighted in the perception of the hospital staff. The participants suggested organizational changes, training and monitoring to address this. The information generated is relevant not merely to the microsystem studied but to other institutions in similar settings.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4449010?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT sudhirchandrajoshi staffperceptiononbiomedicalorhealthcarewastemanagementaqualitativestudyinaruraltertiarycarehospitalinindia
AT vishaldiwan staffperceptiononbiomedicalorhealthcarewastemanagementaqualitativestudyinaruraltertiarycarehospitalinindia
AT ashokjtamhankar staffperceptiononbiomedicalorhealthcarewastemanagementaqualitativestudyinaruraltertiarycarehospitalinindia
AT ritajoshi staffperceptiononbiomedicalorhealthcarewastemanagementaqualitativestudyinaruraltertiarycarehospitalinindia
AT harshadashah staffperceptiononbiomedicalorhealthcarewastemanagementaqualitativestudyinaruraltertiarycarehospitalinindia
AT meghasharma staffperceptiononbiomedicalorhealthcarewastemanagementaqualitativestudyinaruraltertiarycarehospitalinindia
AT ashishpathak staffperceptiononbiomedicalorhealthcarewastemanagementaqualitativestudyinaruraltertiarycarehospitalinindia
AT raginimacaden staffperceptiononbiomedicalorhealthcarewastemanagementaqualitativestudyinaruraltertiarycarehospitalinindia
AT ceciliastalsbylundborg staffperceptiononbiomedicalorhealthcarewastemanagementaqualitativestudyinaruraltertiarycarehospitalinindia
_version_ 1724927654286589952