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Hand Hygiene Compliance in the Setting of Trauma Resuscitation
- Source :
- Injury. 48(1)
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Introduction Healthcare-associated infections are a significant health burden, and hand hygiene (HH) is an essential prevention strategy. World Health Organization (WHO) 2009 guidelines recommend washing hands during five moments of patient care; 1)before touching a patient; 2)before a clean procedure; 3)after body fluid exposure; and 4)after touching a patient or 5)patient surroundings. HH opportunities at these 5 moments are frequent and compliance is low (22-60%). Infection risk is particularly high in trauma patients, and HH compliance during active trauma resuscitation has yet to be evaluated. Materials and Methods Using video surveillance, all healthcare worker (HCW)-patient interactions for 30 patients were retrospectively reviewed for HH compliance according to WHO guidelines and glove use during initial resuscitation at a level-1 trauma center. Results 342 HCW-patient interactions and 1034 HH opportunities were observed. HH compliance with the WHO moments was 7% (71/1034) overall; 3% (10/375) before patient contact, 0% (0/178) before a clean procedure, 11% (2/19) after body fluid contact, 15% (57/376) after patient contact and 2% (2/86) after contact with the environment. Glove use was more common, particularly before (69%) and after (47%) patient contact and after body fluid contact (58%). No HH was observed before clean procedures, but HCW donned new gloves 75% of the time before bedside procedures. If donning/removing gloves was included with HH as compliant, compliance was 57% overall. Conclusion HH opportunities are frequent and compliance with WHO HH guidelines may be infeasible, requiring significant amounts of time that may be better spent with the patient during the golden hour of trauma resuscitation. In an era where more scrutiny is being applied to patient safety, particularly the prevention of inpatient infections, more research is needed to identify alternative strategies (e.g. glove use, prioritizing moments) that may more effectively promote compliance in this setting.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Resuscitation
media_common.quotation_subject
Health Personnel
030501 epidemiology
World Health Organization
Article
03 medical and health sciences
Patient safety
0302 clinical medicine
Trauma Centers
Hygiene
medicine
Infection control
Humans
Hand Hygiene
030212 general & internal medicine
Intensive care medicine
General Environmental Science
media_common
Cross Infection
Infection Control
business.industry
Trauma center
Hospitals
Compliance (physiology)
Baltimore
Golden hour (medicine)
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Guideline Adherence
Patient Safety
0305 other medical science
Trauma resuscitation
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18790267
- Volume :
- 48
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Injury
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....18ad9fbea727f2a275fcf40241d08766