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Journal ArticleDOI

Healthcare workers' hand decontamination practices: compliance with recommended guidelines

Sile A. Creedon
- 01 Aug 2005 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 3, pp 208-216
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TLDR
Implementation of the multifaceted interventional behavioural hand hygiene programme resulted in an overall improvement in compliance with hand hygiene guidelines and healthcare workers believed that their skin condition improved and an increase in knowledge about handwashing guidelines was found.
Abstract
Aim. This paper reports a study of healthcare workers' handwashing/hand hygiene practices from a behavioural perspective. Background.  Hospital acquired infection poses a very real and serious threat to all who are admitted to hospital. Pathogens are readily transmitted on healthcare workers’ hands, and hand hygiene substantially reduces this transmission. Evidence-based guidelines for healthcare workers’ hand hygiene practices exist, but compliance with these is internationally low. Methods.  A quasi-experimental design with a convenient sample was used. The Predisposing, Reinforcing, Enabling Constructs in Educational Diagnosis and Evaluation Health Education Theory was used as the theoretical framework, and the data were collected in 2001. Healthcare workers’ handwashing practices (observation of behaviour, n = 314) and their predisposition (attitudes, beliefs and knowledge) towards compliance with hand hygiene guidelines (questionnaire, n = 62) were studied. Nurses, doctors, physiotherapists and care assistants involved in direct patient care in the study unit participated in the study. The interventional hand hygiene programme aimed to predispose healthcare workers to adopt hand hygiene behaviour (poster campaign and educational handout), reinforce (feedback on pretest results) and enable the behaviour (provision of an alcohol hand rub beside each patients bedside). Results.  Implementation of the multifaceted interventional behavioural hand hygiene programme resulted in an overall improvement in compliance with hand hygiene guidelines (51–83%, P < 0·001). Furthermore, healthcare workers believed that their skin condition improved (P < 0·001). An increase in knowledge about handwashing guidelines was also found. Conclusions.  In order to be effective, efforts to improve compliance with handwashing guidelines must be multifaceted. Alcohol hand rubs (with emollients) need to be provided at each patient's bedside. Issues surrounding healthcare workers’ skin irritation need to be addressed urgently.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of the Research Literature on Evidence-Based Healthcare Design

TL;DR: This review found a growing body of rigorous studies to guide healthcare design, especially with respect to reducing the frequency of hospital-acquired infections and the state of knowledge of evidence-based healthcare design has grown rapidly in recent years.
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interventions to improve hand hygiene compliance in patient care

TL;DR: The quality of intervention studies intended to increase hand hygiene compliance remains disappointing and although multifaceted campaigns with social marketing or staff involvement appear to have an effect, there is insufficient evidence to draw a firm conclusion.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Qualitative Exploration of Reasons for Poor Hand Hygiene Among Hospital Workers: Lack of Positive Role Models and of Convincing Evidence That Hand Hygiene Prevents Cross-Infection

TL;DR: The results indicate that beliefs about the importance of self-protection are the main reasons for performing hand hygiene, and a lack of positive role models and social norms may hinder compliance.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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