Frontiers in Medicine (Jan 2023)

Indications for hand and glove disinfection in Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support: A manikin simulation study

  • Stefan Bushuven,
  • Stefan Bushuven,
  • Stefan Bushuven,
  • Joachim Bansbach,
  • Michael Bentele,
  • Michael Bentele,
  • Stefanie Bentele,
  • Stefanie Bentele,
  • Stefanie Bentele,
  • Bianka Gerber,
  • Nicolas Reinoso-Schiller,
  • Simone Scheithauer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.1025449
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Background and aimThere are no investigations on hand hygiene during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), even though these patients are at high risk for healthcare-associated infections. We aimed to evaluate the number of indicated hand hygiene per CPR case in general and the fraction that could be accomplished without delay for other life-saving techniques through standardized observations.Materials and methodsIn 2022, we conducted Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS) courses over 4 days, practicing 33 ACLS case vignettes with standard measurements of chest compression fractions and hand hygiene indications. A total of nine healthcare workers (six nurses and three physicians) participated.ResultsA total of 33 training scenarios resulted in 613 indications for hand disinfection. Of these, 150 (24%) occurred before patient contact and 310 (51%) before aseptic activities. In 282 out of 310 (91%) indications, which have the highest impact on patient safety, the medication administrator was responsible; in 28 out of 310 (9%) indications, the airway manager was responsible. Depending on the scenario and assuming 15 s to be sufficient for alcoholic disinfection, 56–100% (mean 84.1%, SD ± 13.1%) of all indications could have been accomplished without delaying patient resuscitation. Percentages were lower for 30-s of exposure time.ConclusionTo the best of our knowledge, this is the first study investigating the feasibility of hand hygiene in a manikin CPR study. Even if the feasibility is overestimated due to the study setup, the fundamental conclusion is that a relevant part of the WHO indications for hand disinfection can be implemented without compromising quality in acute care, thus increasing the overall quality of patient care.

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