Intelligent Medicine (Aug 2022)

Handwashing quality assessment via deep learning: a modelling study for monitoring compliance and standards in hospitals and communities

  • Ting Wang,
  • Jun Xia,
  • Tianyi Wu,
  • Huanqi Ni,
  • Erping Long,
  • Ji-Peng Olivia Li,
  • Lanqin Zhao,
  • Ruoxi Chen,
  • Ruixin Wang,
  • Yanwu Xu,
  • Kai Huang,
  • Haotian Lin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 152 – 160

Abstract

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Background: Hand hygiene can be a simple, inexpensive, and effective method for preventing the spread of infectious diseases. However, a reliable and consistent method for monitoring adherence to the guidelines within and outside healthcare settings is challenging. The aim of this study was to provide an approach for monitoring handwashing compliance and quality in hospitals and communities. Methods: We proposed a deep learning algorithm comprising three-dimensional convolutional neural networks (3D CNNs) and used 230 standard handwashing videos recorded by healthcare professionals in the hospital or at home for training and internal validation. An assessment scheme with a probability smoothing method was also proposed to optimize the neural network's output to identify the handwashing steps, measure the exact duration, and grade the standard level of recognized steps. Twenty-two videos by healthcare professionals in another hospital and 28 videos recorded by civilians in the community were used for external validation. Results: Using a deep learning algorithm and an assessment scheme, combined with a probability smoothing method, each handwashing step was recognized (ACC ranged from 90.64% to 98.87% in the hospital and from 87.39% to 96.71% in the community). An assessment scheme measured each step's exact duration, and the intraclass correlation coefficients were 0.98 (95% CI: 0.97–0.98) and 0.91 (95% CI: 0.88–0.93) for the total video duration in the hospital and community, respectively. Furthermore, the system assessed the quality of handwashing, similar to the expert panel (kappa = 0.79 in the hospital; kappa = 0.65 in the community). Conclusions: This work developed an algorithm to directly assess handwashing compliance and quality from videos, which is promising for application in healthcare settings and communities to reduce pathogen transmission.

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