Improving Hand Hygiene Adherence in Healthcare Workers Before Patient Contact: A Multimodal Intervention in Four Tertiary Care Hospitals in Japan
Autor: | Akihiko Saitoh, Sanjay Saint, Karen E. Fowler, Kiyomi Sato, Kiyoko Narita, Kumiko Shioiri, Kakuei Osaki, David Ratz, Yoko Magara |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) Leadership and Management Hospitalized patients media_common.quotation_subject Pneumonia Viral Assessment and Diagnosis 01 natural sciences Tertiary care World health Infectious Disease Transmission Professional-to-Patient 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Hygiene Intervention (counseling) Health care medicine Humans 030212 general & internal medicine 0101 mathematics Pandemics Care Planning media_common Cross Infection business.industry Health Policy 010102 general mathematics Patient contact COVID-19 General Medicine Family medicine Practice Guidelines as Topic Fundamentals and skills Guideline Adherence Coronavirus Infections business Hospital Units Hand Disinfection |
Zdroj: | Journal of Hospital Medicine. 15:262-267 |
ISSN: | 1553-5606 1553-5592 |
DOI: | 10.12788/jhm.3446 |
Popis: | BACKGROUND: Hand hygiene is key to preventing healthcare-associated infection and the spread of respiratory viruses like the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19. Unfortunately, hand hygiene adherence of healthcare workers (HCWs) in Japan is suboptimal according to previous studies. OBJECTIVES: Our objectives were to evaluate hand hygiene adherence among physicians and nurses before touching hospitalized patients and to evaluate changes in hand hygiene adherence after a multimodal intervention was implemented. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We conducted a pre- and postintervention study with HCWs at four tertiary hospitals in Niigata, Japan. Hand hygiene observations were conducted from June to August 2018 (preintervention) and February to March 2019 (postintervention). INTERVENTION: The multimodal hand hygiene intervention recommended by the World Health Organization was tailored to each hospital and implemented from September 2018 to February 2019. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: We observed hand hygiene adherence before touching patients in each hospital and compared rates before and after intervention. Intervention components were also evaluated. RESULTS: There were 2,018 patient observations preintervention and 1,630 postintervention. Overall, hand hygiene adherence improved from 453 of 2,018 preintervention observations (22.4%) to 548 of 1,630 postintervention observations (33.6%; P < .001). Rates improved more among nurses (13.9 percentage points) than among doctors (5.7 percentage points). Improvement varied among the hospitals: Hospital B (18.4 percentage points) was highest, followed by Hospitals D (11.4 percentage points), C (11.3 percentage points), and Hospital A (6.5 percentage points). CONCLUSIONS: A multimodal intervention improved hand hygiene adherence rates in physicians and nurses in Niigata, Japan; however, further improvement is necessary. Given the current suboptimal hand hygiene adherence rates in Japanese hospitals, the spread of COVID-19 within the hospital setting is a concern. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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