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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Global implementation of WHO's multimodal strategy for improvement of hand hygiene: a quasi-experimental study

TLDR
Implementation of WHO's hand-hygiene strategy is feasible and sustainable across a range of settings in different countries and leads to significant compliance and knowledge improvement in health-care workers, supporting recommendation for use worldwide.
Abstract
Summary Background Health-care-associated infections are a major threat to patient safety worldwide. Transmission is mainly via the hands of health-care workers, but compliance with recommendations is usually low and effective improvement strategies are needed. We assessed the effect of WHO's strategy for improvement of hand hygiene in five countries. Methods We did a quasi-experimental study between December, 2006, and December, 2008, at six pilot sites (55 departments in 43 hospitals) in Costa Rica, Italy, Mali, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. A step-wise approach in four 3–6 month phases was used to implement WHO's strategy and we assessed the hand-hygiene compliance of health-care workers and their knowledge, by questionnaire, of microbial transmission and hand-hygiene principles. We expressed compliance as the proportion of predefined opportunities met by hand-hygiene actions (ie, handwashing or hand rubbing). We assessed long-term sustainability of core strategy activities in April, 2010. Findings We noted 21 884 hand-hygiene opportunities during 1423 sessions before the intervention and 23 746 opportunities during 1784 sessions after. Overall compliance increased from 51·0% before the intervention (95% CI 45·1–56·9) to 67·2% after (61·8–72·2). Compliance was independently associated with gross national income per head, with a greater effect of the intervention in low-income and middle-income countries (odds ratio [OR] 4·67, 95% CI 3·16–6·89; p Interpretation Implementation of WHO's hand-hygiene strategy is feasible and sustainable across a range of settings in different countries and leads to significant compliance and knowledge improvement in health-care workers, supporting recommendation for use worldwide. Funding WHO, University of Geneva Hospitals, the Swiss National Science Foundation, Swiss Society of Public Health Administration and Hospital Pharmacists.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of handrubbing using locally-manufactured alcohol-based handrubs in paediatric wards in Harare, Zimbabwe

TL;DR: Use of ABHR represents an attractive intervention for reducing nosocomial infections in this setting and a single application under controlled conditions achieved an average of 82% (or 0.72 log) reduction in detectable counts.
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of the hand hygiene role model project on improving healthcare workers' compliance: A quasi-experimental observational study.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors evaluated the impact of role model in hand hygiene on health care worker's immediate and long term compliance with hand hygiene practices in a pretest-post-test quasi-experimental observational study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implementing psychosocial evidence-based practices in mental health: are we moving in the right direction?

TL;DR: The results were by far disappointing: there was no effect in antipsychotic polypharmacy reduction and no impact in clinical symptoms, care satisfaction, drug attitude, or adherence rates, and few reports have been made in countries of middle-high income.
Dissertation

Evaluating the efficacy of a school-based hand hygiene programme for children in Malawi, sub-Saharan Africa : a cluster randomised controlled trial

TL;DR: The reader agrees to indemnify and hold the University harmless from and against any loss, damage, cost, liability or expenses arising from copyright infringement or unauthorized usage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Students' observations of hand hygiene in nursing homes using the five moments of hand hygiene.

TL;DR: Hand hygiene adherence was too low to prevent healthcare-associated infections and to reduce the use of antibiotics, and nursing students' reflections after observing hand hygiene practices gives them a deeper understanding of the subject matter.
References
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Effectiveness of a hospital-wide programme to improve compliance with hand hygiene

TL;DR: The campaign produced a sustained improvement in compliance with hand hygiene, coinciding with a reduction of nosocomial infections and MRSA transmission, and the promotion of bedside, antiseptic handrubs largely contributed to the increase in compliance.
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Burden of endemic health-care-associated infection in developing countries: systematic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: The epidemiology of endemic health-care-associated infection in developing countries is assessed and a need to improve surveillance and infection-control practices is indicated.
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Financial crisis, austerity, and health in Europe

TL;DR: Although there are many potentially confounding differences between countries, the analysis suggests that the interaction of fiscal austerity with economic shocks and weak social protection is what ultimately seems to escalate health and social crises in Europe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Infection Control — A Problem for Patient Safety

TL;DR: Nosocomial infections are today by far the most common complications affecting hospitalized patients, and a single type of nosocomial infection — surgical-wound infection — constituted the second-largest category of adverse events.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic Review of Studies on Compliance with Hand Hygiene Guidelines in Hospital Care

TL;DR: Noncompliance with hand hygiene guidelines is a universal problem, which calls for standardized measures for research and monitoring andoretical models from the behavioral sciences should be used internationally and should be adapted to better explain the complexities of hand hygiene.
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