Improving hand hygiene compliance in the emergency department: Getting to the point

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Abstract

Background: The emergency department (ED) represents an environment with a high density of invasive, and thus, infection-prone procedures. The two primary goals of this study were (1) to define the number of hand-rubs needed for an individual patient care at the ED and (2) to optimize hand hygiene (HH) compliance without increasing workload.Methods: Prospective tri-phase (6-week observation phases interrupted by two 6-week interventions) before after study to determine opportunities for and compliance with HH (WHO definition). Standard operating procedures (SOPs) were optimized for invasive procedures during two predefined intervention periods (phases I and II) to improve workflow practices and thus compliance with HH.Results: 378 patient cases were evaluated with 5674 opportunities for hand rubs (HR) and 1664 HR performed. Compliance significantly increased from 21% (545/2603) to 29% (467/1607), and finally 45% (652/1464; all p<0.001) in phases 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The number of HR needed for one patient care significantly decreased from 22 to 13 for the non-surgical and from 13 to 7 for the surgical patients (both p<0.001) due to improved workflow practices after implementing SOPs. In parallel, the number of HR performed increased from 3 to 5 for non-surgical (p<0.001) and from 2 to 3 for surgical patients (p=0.317). Avoidable opportunities as well as glove usage instead of HR significantly decreased by 70% and 73%, respectively.Conclusions: Our study provides the first detailed data on HH in an ED setting. Importantly, HH compliance improved significantly without increasing workload. © 2013 Scheithauer et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Scheithauer, S., Kamerseder, V., Petersen, P., Brokmann, J. C., Lopez-Gonzalez, L. A., Mach, C., … Lemmen, S. W. (2013). Improving hand hygiene compliance in the emergency department: Getting to the point. BMC Infectious Diseases, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-13-367

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