Barriers and bridges to infection prevention and control: results of a qualitative case study of a Netherlands' surgical unit
Autor: | Naomi Krogman, Ada C. M. Gigengack-Baars, Patricia Beryl Marck, Marc J. M. Bonten, Geoff Taylor, Chantal Backman, Anne E. Sales |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | BMJ Open |
ISSN: | 2044-6055 |
Popis: | Objectives The objectives of the study are to observe the overall work environment including infection prevention and control (IP&C) practices on the target surgical unit; to analyse the policies and procedures in the hospital and unit environments; to analyse the barriers and bridges to IP&C that practitioners identify in visual narratives of their unit environment and to collect monthly specific IP&C-related anonymised data. Design In this qualitative case study analysis, a socio-ecological approach on health systems informed the research design and provided a framework to better understand the complexity of implementing effective IP&C. Setting The study was conducted on a surgical unit at a Netherlands' hospital that reported successful reductions in the prevalence of targeted multidrug-resistant organisms. Methods Research methods included unit observations (n=3), review of relevant policies and procedures, five practitioner-led photo walkabouts of the unit (n=7), three photo elicitation focus groups with practitioners (n=13) and the review of related IP&C data. Results The findings indicate some conditions and processes present that may influence the low prevalence of multidrug-resistant organisms, including the ‘search and destroy’ active surveillance strategy, low occupancy rates, a centralised bed cleaning system and the presence of an active grass roots Hygiene in Practice group, which engages practitioners in several ongoing activities to promote IP&C on the units. Conclusions Further research on the benefits of practitioner-led community of practices on IP&C practices such as the Hygiene in Practice group is also recommended. Additional case studies to compare theses practices with other acute care hospital around the world would be a valuable way to better understand what IP&C programmes are most effective in which contexts and for what reasons. Further data are available by contacting the primary author directly. Article summary Article focus To observe the overall work environment including infection prevention and control (IP&C) practices on the target surgical unit; To critically review the policies and procedures aimed at the prevention and minimisation of multidrug-resistant organisms in the hospital and unit environments; To analyse the barriers and bridges to IP&C that practitioners identify in visual narratives of their unit environment and To collect monthly specific IP&C-related anonymised data. Key messages The findings indicate some conditions and processes present that may influence the low prevalence of multidrug-resistant organisms, including:The ‘search and destroy’ active surveillance strategy, low occupancy ratesA centralised bed cleaning system andThe presence of an active grass roots Hygiene in Practice group, which engages practitioners in several ongoing activities to promote IP&C on the units. Strengths and limitations of this study Multiple methods of data collection and a broad socio-ecological system approach to study IP&C on the unit strengthen this research. It is possible that staff may have altered their behaviour from normal practices during unit observations. The prevalence counts of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, vancomycin-resistant enterococc, Clostridium difficile infections and extended spectrum beta-lactamase; the rates of hand hygiene product usage and antibiotic data were collected by hospital personnel not supervised by the researcher, limiting the ability to assess the rigour of data collection. The focus of this study was on a specific clinical unit of the hospital. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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