Compliance of primary and secondary care public hospitals with standard practices for reprocessing and steam sterilization of reusable medical devices in Nepal: findings from nation-wide multicenter clustered audits

Abstract Background Reusable medical devices in healthcare facilities are decontaminated and reprocessed following standard practices before each clinical procedure. Reprocessing of critical medical devices (those used for invasive clinical procedures) comprises several processes including steriliza...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gopal Panta, Ann K. Richardson, Ian C. Shaw, Patricia A. Coope
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05788-0
id doaj-b14e697914e64e1ea078407212f69a6a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b14e697914e64e1ea078407212f69a6a2020-11-25T03:40:33ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632020-10-0120111310.1186/s12913-020-05788-0Compliance of primary and secondary care public hospitals with standard practices for reprocessing and steam sterilization of reusable medical devices in Nepal: findings from nation-wide multicenter clustered auditsGopal Panta0Ann K. Richardson1Ian C. Shaw2Patricia A. Coope3Save the ChildrenSchool of Health Sciences, University of CanterburySchool of Physical and Chemical Sciences, University of CanterburyCollege of Education, Health and Human Development, University of CanterburyAbstract Background Reusable medical devices in healthcare facilities are decontaminated and reprocessed following standard practices before each clinical procedure. Reprocessing of critical medical devices (those used for invasive clinical procedures) comprises several processes including sterilization, which provides the highest level of decontamination. Steam sterilization is the most used sterilization procedure across the globe. Noncompliance with standards addressing reprocessing of medical devices may lead to inadequate sterilization and thus increase the risk of person-to-person or environmental transmission of pathogens in healthcare facilities. We conducted nationwide multicenter clustered audits to understand the compliance of primary- and secondary-care public hospitals in Nepal with the standard practices for medical device reprocessing, including steam sterilization. Methods We developed an audit tool to assess compliance of hospitals with the standard practices for medical device reprocessing including steam sterilization. Altogether, 189 medical device reprocessing cycles which included steam sterilization were assessed in 13 primary and secondary care public hospitals in Nepal using the audit tool. Percentage compliance was calculated for each standard practice. Mean percentage compliances were obtained for overall primary and secondary care hospitals and for each hospital type, specific hospital and process involved. Results For all primary and secondary care hospitals in Nepal, the mean percentage compliance with the standard practices for medical device reprocessing including steam sterilization was 25.9% (95% CI 21.0–30.8%). The lower the level of care provided by the hospitals, the lower was the mean percentage compliance, and the difference in the means across the hospital types was statistically significant (p < 0.01). The mean percentage compliance of individual hospitals ranged from 14.7 to 46.0%. The hospitals had better compliance with the practices for cleaning of used devices and transport and storage of sterilized devices compared with the practices for other processes of the medical device reprocessing cycle. Conclusion The primary and secondary care hospitals in Nepal had poor compliance with the standard practices for steam sterilization and reprocessing of medical devices. Interventions to improve compliance of the hospitals are immediately required to minimize the risks of person-to-person or environmental transmission of pathogens through inadequately reprocessed medical devices.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05788-0Medical devicesReprocessingSteam sterilizationAudits
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gopal Panta
Ann K. Richardson
Ian C. Shaw
Patricia A. Coope
spellingShingle Gopal Panta
Ann K. Richardson
Ian C. Shaw
Patricia A. Coope
Compliance of primary and secondary care public hospitals with standard practices for reprocessing and steam sterilization of reusable medical devices in Nepal: findings from nation-wide multicenter clustered audits
BMC Health Services Research
Medical devices
Reprocessing
Steam sterilization
Audits
author_facet Gopal Panta
Ann K. Richardson
Ian C. Shaw
Patricia A. Coope
author_sort Gopal Panta
title Compliance of primary and secondary care public hospitals with standard practices for reprocessing and steam sterilization of reusable medical devices in Nepal: findings from nation-wide multicenter clustered audits
title_short Compliance of primary and secondary care public hospitals with standard practices for reprocessing and steam sterilization of reusable medical devices in Nepal: findings from nation-wide multicenter clustered audits
title_full Compliance of primary and secondary care public hospitals with standard practices for reprocessing and steam sterilization of reusable medical devices in Nepal: findings from nation-wide multicenter clustered audits
title_fullStr Compliance of primary and secondary care public hospitals with standard practices for reprocessing and steam sterilization of reusable medical devices in Nepal: findings from nation-wide multicenter clustered audits
title_full_unstemmed Compliance of primary and secondary care public hospitals with standard practices for reprocessing and steam sterilization of reusable medical devices in Nepal: findings from nation-wide multicenter clustered audits
title_sort compliance of primary and secondary care public hospitals with standard practices for reprocessing and steam sterilization of reusable medical devices in nepal: findings from nation-wide multicenter clustered audits
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Background Reusable medical devices in healthcare facilities are decontaminated and reprocessed following standard practices before each clinical procedure. Reprocessing of critical medical devices (those used for invasive clinical procedures) comprises several processes including sterilization, which provides the highest level of decontamination. Steam sterilization is the most used sterilization procedure across the globe. Noncompliance with standards addressing reprocessing of medical devices may lead to inadequate sterilization and thus increase the risk of person-to-person or environmental transmission of pathogens in healthcare facilities. We conducted nationwide multicenter clustered audits to understand the compliance of primary- and secondary-care public hospitals in Nepal with the standard practices for medical device reprocessing, including steam sterilization. Methods We developed an audit tool to assess compliance of hospitals with the standard practices for medical device reprocessing including steam sterilization. Altogether, 189 medical device reprocessing cycles which included steam sterilization were assessed in 13 primary and secondary care public hospitals in Nepal using the audit tool. Percentage compliance was calculated for each standard practice. Mean percentage compliances were obtained for overall primary and secondary care hospitals and for each hospital type, specific hospital and process involved. Results For all primary and secondary care hospitals in Nepal, the mean percentage compliance with the standard practices for medical device reprocessing including steam sterilization was 25.9% (95% CI 21.0–30.8%). The lower the level of care provided by the hospitals, the lower was the mean percentage compliance, and the difference in the means across the hospital types was statistically significant (p < 0.01). The mean percentage compliance of individual hospitals ranged from 14.7 to 46.0%. The hospitals had better compliance with the practices for cleaning of used devices and transport and storage of sterilized devices compared with the practices for other processes of the medical device reprocessing cycle. Conclusion The primary and secondary care hospitals in Nepal had poor compliance with the standard practices for steam sterilization and reprocessing of medical devices. Interventions to improve compliance of the hospitals are immediately required to minimize the risks of person-to-person or environmental transmission of pathogens through inadequately reprocessed medical devices.
topic Medical devices
Reprocessing
Steam sterilization
Audits
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05788-0
work_keys_str_mv AT gopalpanta complianceofprimaryandsecondarycarepublichospitalswithstandardpracticesforreprocessingandsteamsterilizationofreusablemedicaldevicesinnepalfindingsfromnationwidemulticenterclusteredaudits
AT annkrichardson complianceofprimaryandsecondarycarepublichospitalswithstandardpracticesforreprocessingandsteamsterilizationofreusablemedicaldevicesinnepalfindingsfromnationwidemulticenterclusteredaudits
AT iancshaw complianceofprimaryandsecondarycarepublichospitalswithstandardpracticesforreprocessingandsteamsterilizationofreusablemedicaldevicesinnepalfindingsfromnationwidemulticenterclusteredaudits
AT patriciaacoope complianceofprimaryandsecondarycarepublichospitalswithstandardpracticesforreprocessingandsteamsterilizationofreusablemedicaldevicesinnepalfindingsfromnationwidemulticenterclusteredaudits
_version_ 1724534174256201728