Improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a Hospital in Guizhou Province, China

Objective: Hand hygiene (HH) is a critical component for controlling hospital-acquired infection (HAI). The present study was designed to develop an intervention approach to improve compliance with HH among healthcare workers in a hospital setting. Methods: The HH intervention study was conducted in...

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Main Authors: Xia Mu, Yan Xu, Tingxiu Yang, Ji Zhang, Chong Wang, Wei Liu, Jing Chen, Luyu Tang, Huai Yang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-09-01
Series:Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1413867016300885
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spelling doaj-af64c1d6de104b5c9eddc7d9c8a8a5bb2020-11-25T03:46:08ZengElsevierBrazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases1413-86702016-09-01205413418S1413-86702016000500413Improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a Hospital in Guizhou Province, ChinaXia Mu0Yan Xu1Tingxiu Yang2Ji Zhang3Chong Wang4Wei Liu5Jing Chen6Luyu Tang7Huai Yang8Guizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Department of Hospital-Acquired Infection Management, Guiyang, ChinaGuizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Department of Hospital-Acquired Infection Management, Guiyang, ChinaGuizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Department of Hospital-Acquired Infection Management, Guiyang, ChinaGuizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Department of Hospital-Acquired Infection Management, Guiyang, ChinaGuizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Department of Hospital-Acquired Infection Management, Guiyang, ChinaGuizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Department of Hospital-Acquired Infection Management, Guiyang, ChinaGuizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Department of Hospital-Acquired Infection Management, Guiyang, ChinaGuizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Department of Hospital-Acquired Infection Management, Guiyang, ChinaCorresponding author.; Guizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Department of Hospital-Acquired Infection Management, Guiyang, ChinaObjective: Hand hygiene (HH) is a critical component for controlling hospital-acquired infection (HAI). The present study was designed to develop an intervention approach to improve compliance with HH among healthcare workers in a hospital setting. Methods: The HH intervention study was conducted in Guizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Guiyang, China and organized by its Department of HAI Management. It was an observational, prospective, quasiexperimental (before-after intervention) study. The study was divided into two phases: the baseline phase and the intervention phase. The investigative team included clinical monitoring staff and infection control practitioners who received a series of instructions on HH compliance, monitoring skills, and measurement of the use of HH products. Results: Based on 27,852 observations in a 17-month period, the rate of compliance with HH improved from 37.78% at baseline to 75.90% after intervention. Significant improvement in compliance and an increase in consumption of HH products was observed after intervention. The per patient-day consumption of alcohol-based hand rub products and handwash agents increased by 4.75 mL and 4.55 mL, respectively. The consumption of paper towels increased 3.41 sheets per patient-day. During the same period, the prevalence rate of HAI decreased 0.83%. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that a significant improvement in compliance with HH can be achieved through a systemic, multidimensional intervention approach involving all categories of healthcare workers in a hospital setting, which may result in a decrease of the HAI rate. Keywords: Hand hygiene, Compliance, Hospital-acquired infectionhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1413867016300885
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xia Mu
Yan Xu
Tingxiu Yang
Ji Zhang
Chong Wang
Wei Liu
Jing Chen
Luyu Tang
Huai Yang
spellingShingle Xia Mu
Yan Xu
Tingxiu Yang
Ji Zhang
Chong Wang
Wei Liu
Jing Chen
Luyu Tang
Huai Yang
Improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a Hospital in Guizhou Province, China
Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases
author_facet Xia Mu
Yan Xu
Tingxiu Yang
Ji Zhang
Chong Wang
Wei Liu
Jing Chen
Luyu Tang
Huai Yang
author_sort Xia Mu
title Improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a Hospital in Guizhou Province, China
title_short Improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a Hospital in Guizhou Province, China
title_full Improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a Hospital in Guizhou Province, China
title_fullStr Improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a Hospital in Guizhou Province, China
title_full_unstemmed Improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a Hospital in Guizhou Province, China
title_sort improving hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers: an intervention study in a hospital in guizhou province, china
publisher Elsevier
series Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases
issn 1413-8670
publishDate 2016-09-01
description Objective: Hand hygiene (HH) is a critical component for controlling hospital-acquired infection (HAI). The present study was designed to develop an intervention approach to improve compliance with HH among healthcare workers in a hospital setting. Methods: The HH intervention study was conducted in Guizhou Provincial People's Hospital, Guiyang, China and organized by its Department of HAI Management. It was an observational, prospective, quasiexperimental (before-after intervention) study. The study was divided into two phases: the baseline phase and the intervention phase. The investigative team included clinical monitoring staff and infection control practitioners who received a series of instructions on HH compliance, monitoring skills, and measurement of the use of HH products. Results: Based on 27,852 observations in a 17-month period, the rate of compliance with HH improved from 37.78% at baseline to 75.90% after intervention. Significant improvement in compliance and an increase in consumption of HH products was observed after intervention. The per patient-day consumption of alcohol-based hand rub products and handwash agents increased by 4.75 mL and 4.55 mL, respectively. The consumption of paper towels increased 3.41 sheets per patient-day. During the same period, the prevalence rate of HAI decreased 0.83%. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that a significant improvement in compliance with HH can be achieved through a systemic, multidimensional intervention approach involving all categories of healthcare workers in a hospital setting, which may result in a decrease of the HAI rate. Keywords: Hand hygiene, Compliance, Hospital-acquired infection
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1413867016300885
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